“An important contribution to contemporary studies in Maya iconography. The conclusions are significant for the field and perhaps even controversial. . . . [Bassie-Sweet] essentially recasts or reframes what we know about the Tlaloc figure, the Palenque triad, stone weapons, and the duties/characteristics of specific kinds of Maya royalty within a new theory.”
—Michael Callaghan, University of Central Florida
“Bassie-Sweet has written a particularly brilliant blend of iconography, anthropology, and art history. . . . Maya Gods of War is highly recommended and deserves a place on the shelf of any serious Maya scholar.”
—Anthropology Book Forum
Bassie-Sweet’s efforts to bridge the symbolic and supernatural facets of Classic Maya warfare with historical events provide an important perspective on poorly understood aspects of Maya cross-polity conflict and the lasting legacy of Teotihuacan within the Maya region.
—American Anthropologist