Vox Day is an interesting character. There are people who will question anything. And anyone. And even though to most human beings, they can be a massive pain in the ***, they are necessary to potentially pinpoint wrongdoing or intellectual dishonesty.
I really enjoyed reading The irrational atheist , which was a great scrutiny of the arguments brought forth by the four horsemen Hitchens, Dawkins, Dennet and Harris.
This book, however, is little more than a twohundred-page rant of a manifestly quarrelous person. Even though the author tries to inoculate the reader beforehand against the accusation that his motives may not be pure (envy or other potential reasons to smear someone), you can't help but think of them several times while progressing through the book. After all, who would write a whole book on someone they deem evil and dangerous, having listened to dozens of speeches and read 2 opuses of his declared enemy. That's waht you call obsessed, duh.
Throughout the whole thing, Day twists and turns Peterson's rules and puts words in his mouth to fit his narrative. Classic strawmanning. What's more, Day constantly accuses Peterson of hiding his true motives - while doing exactly that! Classic projection.
Why the 2 stars then? Firstly, because parts of the book are actually quite well-written. Secondly, because Day DOES show that some of Peterson's claims just cannot be true (for example that after having consumed some food deleterious to his organism, he was unable to sleep for a month).
Day criticizes that it is hard to pinpoint what exactly Peterson's rules mean, as they are so abstract. However, he glosses over the fact that Peterson also chooses analogies and examples that are applicable to a myriad of different individuals, therefore generalizing a lot. But Peterson does help people with his advice, demonstrably so. For some reason, Day just cannot stand this, ergo this book.