Readable, thoughtful histories of Buddhism are difficult to come by. Most of the material that exists follows the more populist Mahayana branch or the Tibetan version, which has the advantage of a tragic recent past and a dynamic leader. Gombrich is an expert on Theraveda (dismissively referred to as Hinayana, or the Lesser Vehicle by the Mahayanas), particularly is it is practiced in Sri Lanka, where a number of important shrines are located. Gombrich follows the vicissitudes of Sri Lankan Buddhism, but what emerges is one of those interesting voyages that religions take from inspiration to institutionalization. Buddhism, the way (one hesitates to call the original vision, a path to freedom from reincarnation, a religious idea in the classic sense) of the Buddha, emphasizes non-attachment. Yet what one sees in Sri Lanka is a waxing and waning that is dependent on a relationship with the royal family. Some are devout (again, a troubling term for a vision that is so focussed on non-attachment, but relics and idols abound), following Asoka the great Indian Buddhist King with his rest houses on the roads, or decreeing that the king must be a Buddha. Others persecuted it or confiscated lands; at one point, the community had decayed to such a degree that Burmese Buddhists (another Theraveda community) had to be imported to share ordination rituals. Gombrich points out the cognitive dissonance: "When monks are landlords, it is not surprising that they should drift into the same caste as other landlords." But, although Gombrich does not phrase it in these terms, the same modernizing trends that ended the monarchy has once more placed Sri Lankan Buddhism in peril, subjected it to Hinduizing and secularizing trends.