I've been looking for a survey of Chinese Buddhism for some time and this book finally delivered what I was looking for.
It's easy to find short histories of early Buddhism and books about Tibet's idiosyncratic tradition or heavily Americanized books about zen or mindfulness, but there is very little out there about how contemporary Buddhism is practiced in China, the country with the world's most Buddhists.
Yü's book is short and sweet. She covers the basic texts, holidays, practices, and beliefs that would be familiar to Chinese buddhists in their regular lives. It's not a history book but the history of Chinese Buddhism and its major schools are covered.
She pays special attention to women and Buddhism and many of her personal anecdotes are based in Taiwanese Buddhism and she ends the book with a brief ethnographic survey of Buddhist nuns at the Incense Light monastery in Taiwan.
I have very little background in Buddhism or East Asian religion and philosophy so I sometimes found myself lost with the concepts that Yü was skimming over. This isn't her fault, though, as a book can't be short and describing every element of a complex (and foreign to me) religion at the same time.
I definitely recommend this book if you're interested in Chinese religion or Buddhist traditions!