The introduction was not a skip! It was interesting to see that Alexander the Great took the form of the ideal knight and explorer in courtly Medieval Europe as Alisaundre. I did not know that in England and Scotland tales told of his ship ending up there, thus being a distant ancestor of the famed knight Arthur, or that Scottish kings named Alexander claimed to be his descendants. Alexander's Letter to Aristotle about India was full of gripping (albeit exaggerated and kind of problematic in the modern sense) descriptions of the land of India, its animals, its people, its plants, its environment. White lions larger than bulls, serpents thicker than columns,, the Odontotyrannus (tooth tyrrant), dog-headed men, the Sun and Moon prophetic trees... The neverending battles with these beasts entertain the reader. The Life of the Brahmans was another excellent section to read, full of descriptions of the naked philosophers, which seem to be Buddhists based on their lifestyle of only eating fruits and vegetables and meditating, however this is questioned by the descriptions that in the months of July and August they cross the Ganges to have intercourse and procreate with the women living on the opposite side. Alexander's supposed dialogue with the Brahmans is extremely philosophical and a pleasure to read! "Desire nothing and everything will be yours, and you will lack nothing. Desire is the mother of penury; penury is the result of indiscipline treated with bad medicines. It is miserable because it never finds what it seeks, it is never content with what it has, but is tortured with lust for what it does not have... the sky is my roof, the earth my bed, the woods my table, fruit my food, rivers my cup-bearers. I do not eat flesh like a lion, the flesh of other animals does not rot within me. I do not become a grave of dead animals. Providence gives me fruit for food, as mother gives milk to her child.... you are worse than wolves and lions and the most savage beasts; for if wolves and lions could eat fruits they would not look for meat"... so many interesting quotes. in the correspondence of Alexander and Dindimus, Alexander gives thought-provoking criticism and counter-arguments to Dindimus 'boasting' of the Brahmans superior way of life. First he tells him that by critising mens' customs and traditions as sinful, they must think that they are Gods themselves, so far removed from this lowly kind,so they are closer to stupidity than wisdom. Alexander also tells him that their life is not blessed but punished- their land does not have the resources for them to build things- they are prisoners. The land is so far removed, no strangers can come. He compares them to beasts, who are unable to take pleasure in anything good