Chosen by Foreign Affairs as one of the Best Books of 2015. New York Review of Books A stimulating contribution... In this work [Hazareesingh] displays not only a deep familiarity with French society, but a rare sense for a foreigner of what really matters in French intellectual life once you dig below the surface. He is an excellent teller of tales with a good eye for the revealing anecdote. Financial Times [A] thoughtful, stimulating and witty historical survey of French thought. Economist [An] impressive study. Foreign Affairs Focusing with great intelligence and subtlety on distinctively French conceptions of history, nationhood, democratic participation, existentialism, and the creative tension between order and imagination...Anyone who loves, loathes, or is just perplexed by self-styled French intellectuals--that is, most educated French people--should read this book. New Republic Hazareesingh has a gift for distilling mounds of information into clear, engrossing prose. This is above all a convivial book, true to its subtitle though not without a finely tuned bullshit detector... What one comes away with is the unshakable sense that however they do it, the French really do think differently than we do--and this is what we love about them. Newsweek Europe A whirlwind tour of intellectual history from Descartes to Derrida. Jumping from Napoleon to postcolonial immigration, the narrative is brimming with fascinating tidbits...a lively introduction to a French elite that likes to tell itself it has a unique mission to save the world... This sensitive and detailed book is so passionate about it can sometimes feel like French people have completely different brains, like Frenchmen come from Mars and Britons from Venus. Maybe, disappointingly, the French think just like everyone else. Publishers Weekly An equally informative and colorful tour d'horizon of the many strands of, and contradictions in, French philosophy and political thought during the past four centuries. Kirkus Reviews A thoughtful study...[Hazareesingh] achieves the right distance from and intimacy with his subject... A rarefied and compelling study. David Bell, author of The First Total War: Napoleon's Europe and the Birth of Warfare as We Know It Few historians would have the courage to write a book with a title like How the French Think. But few historians know France, and the French, better than Sudhir Hazareesingh. He has brought his formidable knowledge and experience of the country to bear in a book that is consistently engaging and thought-provoking, and written with a light touch that makes it a delight to read. Robert Tombs, Professor of French History at Cambridge University It is unusual to laugh aloud when reading a history of ideas, but I did so more than once while reading How the French Think. Its sweep is thrilling and its expositions lucid, but it carries its learning lightly and is written with an astringent wit. Everyone interested in France and the French will enjoy and learn from this book. Patrice Higonnet, Professor of French History at Harvard University Stendhal wrote that a novel was 'un miroir qu'on promene le long d'un chemin.' And no better mirror on the wandering path of French culture of yesterday and today could be found than this wise and gentle book, as learned as it is engaging. Peguy was worried about what God would have to think about if the French were not there to amuse and inform him. Now we know why this might still be so. Independent (UK) Scholarly, penetrating and sometimes very funny... This is a marvellous, and marvellously readable book: by turns illuminating, affectionate and exasperated. France Today [An] engaging, accessible book... Hazareesingh's superbly researched work traces the history of this spirit, from Descartes, Rousseau and Voltaire to latter-day politicians who talk of France's 'great destiny'. Read this excellent book and next time you witness vigorous finger-pointing in a bistrot, you'll know why the subject being debated is likely to be very lofty indeed! Prospect (UK) Superb... Hazareesingh has done more than anyone writing in English to unravel what the sociologist Emmanuel Todd recently called the 'le mystere francais. Times Higher Education Supplement (UK) Thoughtful and carefully researched observations on French literary life. The Times (UK) Hazareesingh's book is an excellent antidote to British smugness Spectator (UK) [A] bold new book... Hazareesingh's portrait is affectionate in the fullest sense: familiar and fondly teasing...he has a sense of humour to match his intellect. Guardian (UK) [A] fascinating book... Observer, Book of the Day (UK) [A] lively guide to the French mind...Hazareesingh's prose is lively and clear and his erudition and elegance recall Theodore Zeldin, still perhaps the most distinguished guide in the English language to the intricacies of the French imagination...Hazareesingh's tone is playful and sharp...it is worth reading...Hazareensingh for insights into how the French became who they are. The Scotsman (UK) [A] lively and informative account of French thought from Descartes to the present day...expansive in reference, detailed in reading...Hazareesingh has a quick eye to the telling detail, the curious story that illuminates the whole. Standpoint Magazine (UK) In exploring with sharpness and humour the patterns of thought the French have developed over the centuries, he finds some interesting and unexpected relationships between eras and personalities, and explains France's intellectual evolution. The book is rich in information and easy to read...