It's a potboiler, as one would expect from this author, but it's one that held my attention and kept drawing me back to find out what happened next.
What is more, it is not just about televangelism, but about how people with good intentions can try to get their message out to others and how unscrupulous business people will try to hijack anything they think they can make money out of, in the process usually corrupting the ideal and leading it off track.
Nowadays, of course, we have the internet and social media, so it is easier to exchange ideas and learn what is good and works and what isn't and doesn't. That is why there is such a huge battle going on for control of the medium. We must not allow it to be censored! There are plenty of laws covering criminal activities and they need to be enforced to curb criminal activities and such things as hate mail and libel. But it is extremely devious that many are campaigning to ban what they call 'fake news' - basically defined as anything they disagree with. It is this intolerance that must end, not the freedom to express one's ideas and opinions in a public forum - that is one of the most precious of human rights.
Anyway, I recommend this book about the journey of one man who tried to live according to the Christian precept of LOVE.
Maybe his mistake was trying to win converts by word of mouth, rather than by inspiring people through the way one lives one's own life. It's a much slower process, but surely destined to achieve deeper and longer-lasting results.