Rina Verma Williams' nuanced and sophisticated analysis of women's participation in Hindu nationalist politics illuminates a facet of women and politics in India that has not been hitherto extensively researched. Her book deftly uses original archival material, interviews, participant observation, and electoral data to persuasively argue that women as voters, activists, and politicians facilitated the enormous success of the Bharatiya Janata Party. This book is feminist research at its best and is an important and timely contribution to the scholarship on gendered politics in the context of Indian democracy.