Winner of the Tel Aviv Book Award for Middle Eastern Studies 2008"Talmon-Heller is able to portray aspects of Islamic piety along with multifold interpretations and debates. Beyond this superb scholarship, it is the ability to keep her readers immersed in the world of medieval Syria, and to touch the humanity therein, that makes her book refreshing." - Adam R. Gaiser, in: International Journal of Middle East Studies 42.1"Daniella Talmon-Heller has given scholars of many fields, including cultural history, anthropology, and religion, a gift of meticulous research and lively prose. Reading the book is a delightful experience for the specialist, as the copious anecdotes Talmon-Heller relates from her sources (often with a full Arabic transliteration) capture the sensibilities and senses of humor that pervade literary production from this period." - Zayde Antrim, Trinity College, in: Mamluk Studies Review, Vol. 13, No. 2"Talmon-Heller’s work is necessarily specialized and will therefore be most helpful to scholars of the medieval period. The book would fit well into a graduate course on the Crusades or in a course that includes a section on “popular” religious practices in the medieval Islamic period (or indeed a course that challenges a popular/elite dichotomy)." - Adam R. Gaiser, Florida State University, in: International Journal of Middle East Studies 42:1"A most welcome contribution to the fields of history and historiography of Syria and Egypt in the twelfth to fifteenth centuries." - Yehoshua Frenkel, in: Bulletin of the School of Oriental & African Studies 72