‘Part synthesis, part original thesis, teeming with new ideas, and reconsidering old orthodoxies, Shaping Identities in a Holy Land is an inspirational piece of work demonstrating a great deal of reflection and research. Fishhof is especially strong when placing specific pieces of artwork or architectural features in their contemporary context, identifying the moulding influence of contemporary concerns and ambitions. His thesis that a culture of “flexibility” represents the Frankish artistic project is likewise highly illuminating. Historians have traditionally defined Eastern Frankish culture as driven by dogmatic inflexibility and a brutal indifference or hostility towards other cultures; this stands starkly in contradistinction to the far more flexible and negotiated model offered by Fishhof’ - Al-Masāq, 36:2.‘This researcher, in his exceptional way, examines in his new book the existing studies in the field of Crusader art. Fishhof 's book offers a new and original interpretation of those medieval sites where Crusader elements appear in the cities of Jerusalem, Bethlehem and Nazareth, in impressive Crusader churches, and remaining as prominent sites of that period, such as the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and the Church of Emmaus in Abu-Ghosh’ - Ordines Militares, XXIX 2024.‘… an important, interesting, and thoroughly engaging work’ – Crusades, 23:2.