This book is more of a memoir than it is academic, a series of tales about the author’s experiences in defending Israel in the “marketplace of ideas” (a phrase he uses over and over and over again). He seems to constantly challenge others who hold different perspectives to debate, debate, debate, as if a debate is the end-all, be-all to forming an accurate view on a subject.
His turn of phrase was, at times, entertaining and humorous, but then he would take swipes at people he clearly has feuds with. This comes across as juvenile and petty, as the comments made are rarely of substance. He focuses a lot of rebuttal effort into the easy-to-debunk (anti-semitism, holocaust denial), but misses the mark entirely against the nuanced views of the Palestinian conflict that he doesn’t agree with.
His favorite debate tactic in this book is absolutely “whataboutism”, stating that people hold Israel to standards they don’t hold other nations, such as Russia or China, to. Exposing hypocrisy is important, but you cannot structure a valid argument with "what about them?" as your proof.
This book is not a structured argument for the legitimacy or validity of the existence of the (modern day) nation of Israel as we know it. It’s a lot of stories of personal experience that include a lot of name-dropping the important figures the author has met in his life and career.
If you’re looking for a proper intellectual argument and analysis to the historical and ongoing conflicts in Palestine, keep looking. I’m glad I read this book, as it gave me a little insight into the mind of a liberal Zionist. However, reader beware that it is not a serious book about the conflict, as I’d hoped when starting it.