<p><strong>Praise for <em>The Brass Notebook</em>:<br /></strong>“An engaging chronicle of defiance and determination.”<br />—<strong><em>Kirkus Reviews</em></strong><br /> <br />“Jain debuts with a stirring account of her coming-of-age in southern India and her career as a feminist economist. . . . Readers will be enlightened.”<strong><br />—<strong><em>Publishers Weekly<br /><br /></em></strong></strong>“Jain witnessed, and offers through the lens of her particular, ‘game for anything’ perspective, some of the defining moments in the shaping of India as a nation of impossible contradictions and courageous hope.”<br />—<strong><em>The Hindu</em></strong><br /> <br /> “[Jain] is vigilant about showing how freedom is fought for constantly, as a way of being despite the constraints of society, but also contingent on luck, opportunity and the social structures of privilege.”<br />—<strong><em>India Today</em></strong><br /> <br /> “<em>The Brass Notebook</em> is a portrait of a past that feels golden, filled with idealism, grit and hope.”<br />—<strong><em>The Hindustan Times<br /><br /></em></strong>“[<em>The Brass Notebook</em>] brings out, in [the author’s] own charming style, the empathy that has characterized her distinctive approach to economics and social sciences more generally, and enriched that work.”<br />—<strong><em>Telegraph India</em></strong></p>