“As Hahn convincingly shows in her detailed and richly illustrated new book, the relics themselves have the predominant objects of interest over the years for scholars and worshippers alike, but the reliquaries are important and informative art and religious objects in their own right. . . . Beyond the details of medieval Christian art, Hahn’s book proves that the reliquary effect is a thriving force in social life, in the past, present, and future.”
— Anthropology Review Database
"[A] splendid book. . . . The Reliquary Effect sparkles with gorgeous pictures, and the text is deservedly full of epithets such as 'sumptious and spectacular,' 'rich and lavish,' 'lavish and extensive.' The objects under discussion were in most cases the most precious possessions of some of Europe’s most powerful individuals and institutions over more than a thousand years. . . . Hahn elegantly elides her discussion of Christian relics into an investigation of their secular equivalents. . . . A page-turner."
— Art Newspaper
"A compelling examination of relics but mainly reliquaries and their cultural as well as spiritual impact from dust and ashes, to gilded splendors and the contemporary vitrines of Anselm Keifer and even the Vietnam monument by Maya Lin, as well as the hitherto un-probed religious aspects of Joseph Beuys and Paul Thek. . . . A pioneering book, originally argued, excellent in scope and beautifully produced; a book about containment that is perfectly contained."
— ACE/Mercers Book Awards, Runner-Up 2017
"In this stunningly beautiful book, with eighty five color plates, Hahn takes us on a journey that begins with the footprint of Christ from the Mount of Olives, a second-century footprint of the Buddha, a tracing of the Muhammad’s sandal, and a tenth-century silver, gold, and enamel portable altar containing the sandal of St Andrew . . . This is a book that hovers between the prayer desk and the coffee table!"
— Methodist Recorder
"Hahn has filled an important gap in scholarship. This book is the first to understand and analyze reliquaries as creations for the stimulation of attention and the capturing of desire. Hahn’s supreme knowledge and comprehensive approach enable her to look behind the surface of the reliquary, following its developments over time and drawing some sometimes surprising conclusions. As a contribution to the cross-cultural study of art, The Reliquary Effect shows how we can strengthen our understanding of the origins and foundations of our culture and those of others."
— Gerhard Lutz, curator of the Dommuseum Hildesheim