Fascinating account of life in East Javanese village anthropological work written as a novel, works well but unlike a novel little development of plot and no denouement. In some ways Bayu shares features with Anatolian villages, in other ways it is uniquely Javanese and I feel it gave me a new way to understand the many hundreds of thousands of Jakarta people who still have strong ties to their native kampung and who regularly return "mudik" for the Eed (Idul fitri). Also explains the rich, pluralistic, tolerant, cultural heritage of Java: Hindu, Muslim, Christian & mystic which could co exist with blurred lines for centuries. Beatty was pessimistic in the late 90s (end of Suharto era) that fundamentalist Islam was displacing this diverse heritage. But as one villager said the village social order has withstood many tides of upheaval and change over the centuries.