When reading this book, I was quite surprised of the informal atmosphere, which I think is what I liked the most about it. It feels like the author is talking to you, which makes you more comfortable with such a controversial topic.
Evil: A primer makes you think about what evil actually is. It isn't explaining how you should start worshiping Satan, or that you should kill your parents. It takes a step out of your comfort zone and takes you in the world of other religions. It shows how different parts of the world, past and present, views evil.
The best part about this book, in my opinion, is that it isn't trying to persuade you about anything. It is slightly opinionated, about what the author thinks evil is, but he shows factual information, but lets the reader decide on they're own whether or not they believe in evil, or what it is.
"Is it evil for a lawyer to help a guilty criminal evade punishment? For a coyote to have your cat for lunch? For CEO's to plunder cooperations while balancing knife-edge boundries of the law? For weathly people to wax richer while their neighbors struggle in poverty? For humans to kill animals for sport or preform painful experiments on our first cousin, the chimp?"
This is one of my favorite paragraphs, because it really makes you think. The whole book is like that! I love that!