This is a hodgepodge of articles from Scientific American Magazine, transcripts from its podcast, and posts from the SciAm blog. In terms of technical content, this compendium is first rate. Darlington's article on "The Origin of Darwinism" dated 1959 and Grant's article on his research on Darwin's finches in the Galapagos dated 1991 are both excellent scientific articles. Fay-Cooper Cole's personal account of the 1925 Scopes Trial is by far the most interesting in this collection as it provides useful historical context (not to mention a fascinating eyewitness account). Nicholas Matzke's interview with his description on the phylogenetics of creation bills in state legislatures is very telling. But the editorial quality of the book is only mediocre. There are many typos. Transcripts are not particularly well-edited, and there are glaring omissions. Gary Stix's introduction to Section 5 mentions two essays that aren't present in the Kindle edition of this book at all.
The teaching of creationism in public schools has become somewhat of a political sideshow. (Though creationism continues to exist in home school texts and charter schools.) But creationism's anti-science offshoots - climate change denialism, rhetoric from anti-vaxxers, stem cell research hysteria - remain. And just this week, we learned how firmly entrenched anti-science thinking is at the federal level as Republicans attack the validity of science itself as a basis for public policy. So in this regard, "Evolution vs. Creationism" is still worth a read. Recommended.