For non-Muslims, this short book will give them a good background about the Islamic religion. Interestingly, the last 3/4 of the book provides a summary of every sura in the koran.
When reading the sura summaries, I can't help but feel how repetitive and egoistic the suras read. Although there are 114 suras, the topics covered are constantly repeated and repeated. Indeed, I think all unique ideas in the koran can be expressed in just 1/3 the number of suras. So many of the suras are just plain repetition of other suras.
When reading the suras, I find the following most troubling:
- the book keeps constantly praising itself as the most perfect book
- the constant harping of natural phenomenon to be the proof that god exists
- all kinds of adjectives being heaped upon in the description of god (most wise, most forgiving, most compassionate etc)
- the elevation of Mohammad to practically god-like status
- the incessant preaching of the concept of hell-fire as the punishment for non-believers
However, CJ Werelman's critique of each sura, as well as the koran in general, is tempered and mild as compared to those of ex-Muslims like Ali Sina and Ibn Warraq. The commentaries are also not as interesting as the ones written by David Plotz in "Good Book" (from his "Blogging the Bible" blog). Perhaps this is a form of self-censorship. Unfortunately, it is very hard for Islam to answer for the barbarism exhibited by its most fanatic followers. No amount of coddling by Islamic apologists when they say that Islam is a religion of peace will satisfactorily answer the question as to why so much violence is linked it.