"[ A] valuable study of China's relations with groups on its southwestern frontiers."
(Chinese Studies International) "Anderson deftly shows how Dong World authorities navigated political, economic, and military relations with their larger neighbors by controlling key access points. . . . This book will be of interest to historians of China and mainland Southeast Asia, and to scholars interested in premodern transportation networks. Anderson is to be commended for writing the first English-language study of the middle-period Southwest Silk Road, which lays the groundwork for further research by scholars across several disciplines, from history to religious studies to archaeology."
(Crossroads)