This is a book that advocates a Christian approach to life, as against an individualist one which is taken to comprise the gospel of self-fulfilment and its corollary consumerism, of things, experiences and relationships. So in that respect, it was refreshing.
However, there were at least two enormous inferential leaps: one, a blithe acceptance of the First Cause argument for a creator of the universe, the other an argument from the human need for love to the conclusion that love is the driving force of the universe, which therefore requires a God who is love.
This theological flavour made a light-looking book a surprisingly slow read, though I enjoyed the feeling of getting into a very different emotional world.