Kerry San Chirico manages no small feat in bringing the Khrist Bhakta movement, one that eludes ready-made labels, to clarity and life. Rooted in the heart of Hindu India, Catholic priests serve members who take Jesus as their chosen deity and yet largely remain unbaptized. Unraveling historical, social, and religious strands to elucidate the movement's vitality, San Chirico masterfully brings us close, as well, to the stirrings and lives of those who take part. * Corinne Dempsey, author of The Goddess Lives in Upstate New York: Breaking Convention and Making Home at a North American Hindu Temple * This is an elegantly written study of the Khrist Bhaktas, a devotional movement that exists in the indeterminate space between Hindu bhakti and Catholic charismatic practice, on the one hand, and between the institutional church and the Hindu nationalist state on the other. San Chirico's analysis of this anomalous movement opens a remarkable window on a grassroots process of indigenization and hints at the fate and possible future of Christianity in the north Indian 'Hindi belt' * Ann Taves, Distinguished Professor Emerita of Religious Studies, University of California at Santa Barbara * In brief, San Chirico's work contributes mightily to our understanding of India's rich religious landscape, as well as how we approach it. Of the former, there is San Chirico's deft touch in carrying the reader beyond elements of the received wisdom of previous generations of scholars, bolstered by his deep engagement with this particular community of Christian-Hindu devotees; of the latter is San Chirico's skillful weaving together of fieldwork and contextual analysis, all expressed through finely structured prose and a deeply engaging selfawareness of the place of the observer/scholar in analytic studies. . . Between In Hindu and Christian, is, quite frankly, a joy to read, whether for its bold approach to Indian religiosity or its finely detailed engagement with the Khrist Bhakta community, it is a book that truly is (and this is rarely said of academic works) difficult to put down. * Herman Tull, Religion * A strength of the book is the amount of personal interaction that frames the narrative, including extensive transcriptions of interviews with key interlocutors. Finding these people was a unique challenge, San Chirico writes; 'Like the guru-disciple relationship, most never bent over backward to give me information, but when I had arrived at the right questions, I met with answers-which often led to meeting people.' * H.L. Richard , Reading Religion *