[Hecht] brings wit and enthusiasm to her densely packed tale of the freethinking anthropologists, who first knew each other as distraught republicans during the Second Empire. -- Nina C. Ayoub Chronicle of Higher Education Hecht is... a very good writer and a brilliant researcher. Highly recommended for all academic libraries. Library Journal A fascinating glimpse of a little-known chapter in French history. Publishers Weekly Hecht has given us a very strong account of the republican scientific vision... This book will be richly rewarding to scholars of the Third Republic, to historians of anti-clericalism and of the social sciences, and even to laymen with an interest in the current round of the nature-nurture culture wars about the genome and evolutionary psychology. -- Martin S. Staum H-France Book Reviews Clearly, this is a superb work, one that captures a major moment in French and European thought with thorough scholarship and literary grace. Highly recommended. Choice A comprehensively researched, carefully contextualized, engagingly narrated, and provocatively revelatory book about an underappreciated episode in the history of anthropology and religion. -- George W. Stocking Journal of Anthropological Research Jennifer Hecht's endlessly fascinating book...A great gift for that special intellectual history buff in your life. The Society of Mutual Autopsy The often poignant life-histories she recounts...are one of the real pleasures on offer in this wide-ranging, original study of late nineteenth-century French anthropologists. -- Elizabeth Williams American Historical Review The book makes a significant contribution and should be of interest not only to historians but to a wider readership interested in the intersection of culture, science, and politics. Hecht has produced a work of impressive erudition. -- Susan Terrio Anthropological Quarterly Hecht is a vivid writer with a keen eye for the evocative anecdote and the unexpected interconnection... Hecht's book will make provocative reading for historians of science, religion, and republican politics. Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences The result is a well-researched, persuasive, and engaging contribution to the cultural history of modern France. -- John I. Brooks III Journal of Modern History