"Black's book is well researched and intelligent … Most impressive is his ability to bring out the concrete and the social in these narratives, including issues of wealth, prestige, regional rivalry, and gender relations." — Journal of the American Oriental Society"…[an] innovative and stimulating account of early Indian thought." — History of Religions"…among the first to analyze the Upanisadic texts as literature as well as foundational philosophical texts … Black's effortless writing style does not over-simplify, but draws together a vast amount of background information in order to enrich the characterisations of the leading teachers in the Upanisads." — Culture and Religion"This is an outstanding book." — Patrick Olivelle, editor of Between the Empires: Society in India 300 BCE to 400 C"This is the finest, most insightful, and most theoretically sophisticated book on the Upanisads I have ever read. For years I have had students come up to me after class and ask me to recommend a book on the Upanisads and I never could. Now, at last, we have a long critical read of these texts from a multitheoretical perspective: sociological, historical, rhetorical, and gendered." — Jeffrey J. Kripal, author of The Serpent's Gift: Gnostic Reflections on the Study of Religion