I'm a sucker for really weird books, and what could be weirder than applying game theory to famous biblical stories?
Ultimately, it's a little light on the math and a little heavy on the interpretation, but his interpretations are ever-fascinating. Brams has such an unconventional take on many stories that it's sort of mind-warping sometimes, particularly his theological interpretations. Although I should mention that he's frequently more literal to the story than I am, even growing up evangelical, where literalism is the main methodology. So, in that sense, he's probably being more fair to the written word than I -- with all the previous knowledge floating around in my brain--would be.
My main complaint is that sometimes he ascribes motivations to the characters that I can't make sense of--although it's safe to assume he's given it way more thought than I have. Also, I didn't run through the game matrix to see if my interpretation would make a difference to the outcome, so I guess I shouldn't complain too much. Also, I should complain that a large portion of the book is spent re-telling the stories. If I were writing it, I would just sum things up and assume my reader were familiar with the stories--what people, unfamiliar with biblical stories, would be reading this book?--but this is a stylistic complaint, not a topical or factual one.
Anyway, how often do you run across a book in the "Mathematical Theology" section?