Not as good as some of the author's other books, but still worth reading.
The bulk of my objections to this book center around a tendency, particularly pronounced in the second half of the book, to beat the dead horse with statistics. Five pages into the chapter on (as just one example) the relatively narrow subject of how "gun safety" laws have no noteworthy effect on reducing accidental gun deaths and vastly increase the occurrence of rape and murder, his point has become conclusively obvious yet he keeps trying to put more proof in favor of his point when it is not needed.
Don't get me wrong; I'm not against statistics, they are obviously important and, in the abstract, the more the better. But I would place a book like this at the halfway point between a "popular" work and an "academic" work, which means it should have more statistics than a popular work but not as much as he has given.
Alternatively, he could have put a lot more of the statistics he included in the main chapters in his appendix section. Otherwise, however, the cramming of such statistics is better for a reference work as opposed to a general read.
That said, it was still a good read. The first half of the book does a great service in illustrating the hypocrisy of the media, celebrities, and gun control groups -- meaning even more than the already obvious hypocrisy we all observe in our everyday lives. A great supplement to his other works.