Kaur provides a multi-layered account of modern Punjab and Sikh history. ... this book is a work of community memorialisation, and Kaur has stitched together a blanket from patches of community and personal memories. In doing so, she has weaved a powerful tool for collective catharsis and healing. (Guneet Kaur, outlookindia.com, April 30, 2022)
Discrepancy haunts the question of violence in modern India. The very first page of Mallika Kaur's remarkable new book, Faith, Gender, and Activism in the Punjab Conflict: The Wheat Fields Still Whisper, reveals a glimpse into this predicament. ... The novelty of the book lies foremost in its structure. Rather than proceeding chronologically, it simultaneously moves backward from 1995 and forward from 1839, to converge at the pivotal year of 1984. (Navyug Gill, scroll.in, April 24, 2022)
I realise that the book's title may appear daunting, but its contents are readable and interesting to academics and non-academics alike. Mallika provides us with an urgent reminder to stand up for justice, even when the odds are not in our favour. ... 'The Wheat Fields Still Whisper,' will adequately prompt you to humbly present yourself to Mallika's brilliant work, and listen. (Mridula Sharma, feminisminindia.com, April 20, 2022)The writing is brave not only for the stories it narrates, but because Kaur's refreshingly honest and direct voice makes it clear why the personal is political, and why silence is not an option in an increasingly unjust world. (Khushdeep Kaur Malhotra, Journal of Human Rights Practice, Vol. 13 (2), July, 2021)