Manu S. Pillai of
Frontline wrote, "What is surprising about
The Golden Road is the period: while all of Dalrymple's histories so far are set in the modern age, the newest one takes us to the ancient world. Its ambitions are greater, and Dalrymple is in fresh territory. But he pulls it off expertly. The book is edifying, well-structured, learned, and thoroughly interesting."
The Week's Meera Suresh wrote, "The book's lustre lies in its exhaustive coverage of ancient Indian history and Dalrymple's true-to-life descriptions. From a historian's point,
The Golden Road – How Ancient India Transformed the World is an ode to the forgotten chapters of ancient India and its unparalleled riches." Tanjil Rashid of the
Financial Times called
The Golden Road "an absorbingly literary history, a tale of tales, and, in Dalrymple's telling, it was most notably through the dissemination of stories — including ideas and doctrines given narrative form — that ancient India 'transformed the world'." Abhrajyoti Chakraborty, writing in
The Observer, said that Dalrymple "is enthralled by the postcard monuments of ancient India's '
soft power': the magnificent
Borobudur Buddhist temple in Indonesia; the Hindu temple
Angkor Wat in Cambodia. He recounts the flourishing trade between ancient India and the
Roman empire following the famous
Battle of Alexandria in 30BC... He persuasively argues that this maritime trade route preceded the overland Silk Road connecting China, Turkey and the Mediterranean Sea by several centuries." He added, "It is only in the final pages that Dalrymple acknowledges the debates about Indian history that have become unavoidable in recent years." == See also ==