I just skimmed some of the reviews on here and feel compelled to say two things:
1. Someone commented that they wanted to know what happened to the proceeds from this book. I'm pretty sure Daniel wrote this book because he was getting so many questions on this topic. In evangelical circles at the time he wrote this book (2017), he was considered an expert on the topic, and probably wrote it because he was compelled, and figured he could answer more questions this way. And he's a pastor at an inner city church, so ... why would anyone begrudge him side income?
2. For both comments on listening to Black voices in this space and for my own thoughts on the matter, I think it's relevant to note that this book was published in 2017 when there wasn't a ton published on this topic -- or at least not that white people were aware of. I've since come to agree that I don't want to read a lot of white voices on this topic, but ... I had my copy of this book already, and I know Daniel (from old Willow days as he mentions in it) and wanted to read it. In addition, I think there really are (as noted by many commenters) a lot of white people who will only listen to another white person on this topic. As Brenda Salter McNeil writes in the Foreword, "One of the primary issues we must face, especially in this socio-political climate, is the need for white people to do the hard work of wrestling with what it really means to be white." I do think Daniel does a very good job of starting that conversation, and from the point of view of people who haven't paid attention to this yet, this really would be a good book to give them.
For this group of people (white, Protestant, raised in the church, think they aren't racist), this book is needed. It starts right off with "just how white my world was" and I think anyone with a brain reading that section couldn't help but see themselves in his description. As I type this, I realize I think of my uncle when I read things like this. He's a really nice man. He's also (sadly) a Trump supporter, gun rights activist, thinks the election was rigged, thinks discussions of reparation make no sense, doesn't understand that posting a Bible verse one day and a meme about Michelle Obama another day is offensive, etc., etc. He's the kind of person who would actually be (I pray) moved by this book in 2022.
Daniel explains the "normalization of white culture" well, in his own words, and citing British sociologist Alistair Bonnet. You really have to understand that before you can start wrapping your brain around privilege, supremacy, a common memory, disorientation, and more.
One of the things I found so interesting is a time I remember seeing Daniel on the news. He recounts that story -- he and I think 12 other pastors were invited to pray at an event. Post that event, he was asked to come on CNN. Seeking counsel from mentors and the organizers of the event, he told them "of my uneasiness with being invited as the only white pastor who had prayed. Each person I spoke to agreed that it was an obvious display of white privilege that confirmed a recurring pattern of white people ignoring the voices of people of color." So anyone trying to be an ally is like, WHAT DID YOU DO? He goes on, "Despite that observation, they also strongly believed I should seize the opportunity, agreeing that it was a good way to discuss the issue on a larger platform. They said privilege shouldn't keep me from being faithful to discuss repentance with a national audience. One of my pastor friends gave me the bottom line: 'Every black pastor in America says this exact thing from the pulpit every Sunday, but we all know white America isn't going to listen to them. But they just might listen to you.'"
I marked several more pages but I think that above is why books like this are valuable and shows very clearly that there are still white people in this country (and others) who won't read anything else.
Last, I've never heard anyone talk about Nehemiah in the context or race, and I found it fascinating. Daniel's research throughout is really thorough and clearly based in Scripture. This too will speak to people like my uncle.
The one negative and why I'd rather give this a 3.5 is that it's really dry, which is partially why it took me so long to pick it back up after I'd started it in 2020. I'm not saying don't read it; just have some coffee and be willing to give it the space of time and energy it deserves :-)