Being Thai and female, I am delighted to see a book that provides another Thai female's perspective on Thai Buddhism. Buddhism in Thailand has an interesting twist. Organized Buddhism in Thailand displays a rather intresting divergence from the teachings of buddha. This book captures a view on this divergence (Dr. Kabilsingh calls it "corruption of Buddhism") and offers an explanation on how it has affected the Thai women place in Buddism.
Dr. Kabilsingh's book is used as a platform for a small group of Thais who are trying to rally for the legal rights of Buddhist nuns in Thailand (to be equal to monks), e.g. free medical services, etc.
In the early 2000s, Dr. Kabilsingh finally gave up her civilian life and decided to be ordained as a Bhiksunee (a female monk) - a controversial act that attracted many critics in Thailand. They asked "Why can't she be a nun?" "Why try to be equal to a monk (Bhiksu)?". This book will help answer some of those questions.
While this book does provide an introduction to this significant, but under researched, area, and does have some useful and interesting insight into the modern Thai social scene, it falls far short of other work in this area (e.g. the work of Penny van Esterik or Nicola Tannenbaum). Perhaps the most disappointing for me were the first two pages and this set the tone for the rest of the book - the comments on early Thai history are hardly scholarly or correct, relying heavily on Quaritch Wales and Thanom Anamwat, neither of whom are specialists in this period, together with some highly disputed inscriptions. A glance at the bibliography is enough to tell the reader this is a light weight introductory work. Sadly there is no index. It is to be hoped it is followed by a more useful scholarly work which does actually rely on the source texts (which this book promised but failed to do)- as it stands it is something of a roman ? th?se - passionately argued and one cannot quarrel with some of the sentiment. It is a pity it was not more deeply researched.