This is a fine collection of sermons from one of the best early American orators. Worth reading for "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God" alone. I wouldn't call the sermons persuasive (you might disagree if you are a Calvinist), but they are fiery (often in a very literal way), vivid, and well-constructed. These are important as a part of history, too, as they give us a glimpse into the very beginnings of the first true American philosophy, as Edward's thinking is both a descendant of Puritanism and the standard against which the Transcendentalists eventually rebelled. You can't understand eighteenth century America without reading these sermons.