The book tried to warn me when, on the very first page, the author talked about how awful the Theory of Evolution was. But I kept reading and tried to keep an open mind - I'm Catholic but think there's wisdom in all faiths, Christian and non-Christian. And, at first, there was genuine wisdom to be found - one of the ideas I found most inspiring was in the beginning, when the author discusses the boulder in front of Jesus's tomb as a symbol of adversity, strife, and of the Church itself, or of the Devil named Legion who can be symbolic (his words, not mine) of disparate forces that drive one away from God - and I usually appreciate Orthodox Theology a great deal for its warmth and depth of understanding.
At some point, though, the author's disgust with psychiatrists, every religion that isn't Orthodoxy, Hollywood, women who want to work outside the home, vegetarians, people who don't drink alcohol, and probably a lot of other stuff I missed (I'm not exaggerating, each one is, according to the author, wrong) just got to be too much for me. I mean, at one point the author said trying to imagine what Jesus's face looked like was pursuing the path of Satan.
Admittedly, I have problems understanding a man who, on one page, stresses that the Church should not change with the times, and at others discusses that the meaning of Pentecost was for the apostles to preach the word of Christ in different religions. Or, on another page, when he admonishes that reading the words of monks can be dangerous, because they don't live like most people do. I can't help feeling that, when it's all done, the underlying reason for much of my perceived dissonance may be only "because this is what Orthodoxy believes" is why things are good, and "this is what heretics believe" is why things are bad.
Half of the very short book is quotes, too. Some may like this, but quotations are sometimes, like in trying to understand the Bible itself, easy to take out of context.
I wouldn't recommend it for any open-minded believers. The signal-to-noise ratio is IMO too low.