This book, as one can tell from the title, explores "early Christian responses to" what Brooten calls "female homoeroticism." By "female homoeroticism" Brooten means women who were somehow sexually involved with other women, either in longer-term relationships, or simply in a sexual way independent of any long-term relationship. One of the most important things to say about this book is that it examines texts and brings together a large amount of research and analysis that has never been brought together before and, in that sense, it is ground breaking. Her work on Romans 1:26 is, I believe, some of the best out there. It is an important book for those interested in how female/female sexual interaction might have been understood in the time of early Christianity. This is not a book that most "everyday" readers might want to read from cover-to-cover. It is an academic book, and should be of interested to scholars of early Christianity/biblical scholars and those interested the history of sexuality. That said, "everyday" folks who might be interested in this could read parts of the book and find it very interesting and enlightening, while skipping over the translations of obscure documents or inscriptions and such. Although another reviewer noted that this shows that Christianity has been "anti-gay" from the beginning, I'm afraid that is not really what this book does. An important part of this book argues that what we today understand as "gay" or "lesbian" does not closely resemble what females being sexually involved with other females or males being sexually involved with other males looked like thousands of years ago. Brooten does show, however, that females being sexually involved with other females in antiquity was often looked down upon, although the reasons for that are different than the reasons lesbians are often discriminated against today. I would like to have seen Brooten differentiate between "love" between women and "sexual relationships" between women -- she seems to operate under the assumption that these automatically or almost always come together. I also would have preferred that she change the wording in her closing which suggests that "the idea of homosexuality" existed in antiquity. While she makes good arguments that particular sexual preferences and inclinations toward certain kinds of people existed in antiquity, to say that "homosexuality" or "the idea of homosexuality" existed in antiquity is to be too casual with the use of the 19th/20th/21st century construct of homosexuality. As for the review that gave this book only one star -- this book was reviewed in, at the least, a somewhat positive light in nearly all the academic journals which reviewed it. While there are, as with almost all books, some weaknesses, to give it just one star is to absurd. At the least, this book does some exciting and never-before-done work which is always valuable, even if it isn't perfect.