"Longlisted for the Runciman Award, Anglo-Hellenic League" "A Choice Outstanding Academic Title of the Year" "The question of what influences Greeks and Indians might have had on each other in the centuries that followed Alexander the Great is one that has always simultaneously fascinated and frustrated historians so huge gratitude is due to Stoneman for shedding as much light on the issue as anyone is ever likely to do."---Tom Holland, BBC History Magazine "Excellent, and very readable. . . . The Greek Experience of India is the best book ever written on ancient Greek relations with India, and ought to be required reading for global historians of any era."---Peter Thonemann, Times Literary Supplement "Drawing on a vast array of research, [ Stoneman] has compiled a magisterial overview of 'the Indo-Greek era', beginning with Alexanders crossing of the Hindu Kush mountain range in 327 BC and ending with the severing of contact about three centuries later. [ The Greek Experience of India is an] intriguing and valuable book."---James Romm, New York Review of Books "This is a magisterial work with plenty to complement and enrich the writings of those like W.W. Tarn, A.K. Narain and Jean W. Sedlar."---Stephen Kern, Classics for All "[ Stoneman has] such a direct narrative skill that the casual reader will hardly realise this is a solid scholarly thesis. This is an excellent introduction to the relevant source materials and their authors, and destined to be a valued reference."---Bob Rickard, Fortean Times "To those who, like me, want to explore other ancient cultures beyond the Mediterranean basin, this is an excellent book. Stoneman has provided a familiar frame for an unfamiliar place in the world that will surely endure as required reading for any student of Alexander, the Indo-Greeks, and Ancient India."---Owain Williams, Ancient History Magazine "Stonemans narration of a complex subject is a worthy addition to the numerous works of Indo-Roman and Indo-Greek interaction providing a comprehensive review of the time immediately following Alexanders presence in Indian subcontinent.Ashwini Lakshminarayanan, American Journal of Philology"---Ashwini Lakshminarayanan, American Journal of Philology