If an interested reader would pick up this book under the impression that the author lays out how the Russian Imperial government used the Kazan Tatars in their imperial expansions East and South, they would be slightly disappointed. While the author does occasionally bring up concrete examples of Kazan Tatars acting as colonists, interpreters, and merchants in newly conquered Muslim lands, overall the book is focused on particular networks of Kazan Muslim scholars and how they expanded into Western Siberia and the Kazakh Steppes.
Some chapters focus specifically on identifying important scholarly and sheikhly lines, on cultural and religious developments within their communities, as well as the jeopordization of their own privileged positions due to the intellectual/spiritual/economic/social changes that emerged over the centuries. These chapters also address the typical historical evaluations that scholars have made regarding various religious movements, individuals, and communities. It engages with other scholarly opinions and the author then presents her own position of said topic.
This book is definitely not for someone who is unfamiliar with the history of the Kazan Tatars, the history of Islam in the Russian Empire, or Islamic theological/jurispredential distinctions. This book is definitely not for a popular audience and is more appropriate for specialists on the Volga-Ural Muslim communities from the 16th to 20th centuries.