"Julie Gottlieb has done the scholarly community an enormous service by providing the first gendered history of British foreign policy in the age of appeasement. ... Guilty Women undoubtedly provides a much-needed and long-overdue corrective to the tendency within the existing literature to position women on the periphery ... . This is a work of admirable scholarship and ambition, and the ever-expanding canon of appeasement literature is richer for the contributions it makes." (Professor Daniel Hucker, Reviews in History, history.ac.uk, July, 2016) "Julie Gottlieb's impressive study is a wonderful example of their complementarity and, in her skilful hands, their combination profoundly recasts the familiar story of the 'Munich Crisis' of 1938. ... Bringing gender and women's history together, Julie Gottlieb has thus provided us with an immensely rich and rewarding analysis of appeasement. ... this work of stunning craftswomanship and path-breaking scholarship." (Marc Calvini Lefebvre, Revue Francaise de Civilisation Britannique, rfcb.revues.org, July, 2016)