Keith Ward is a theologian, a philosopher, an academic and a Church of England priest. As this book proves, he is adept at writing about the philosophy of religion and theology (they are different disciplines) in simple, clear terms that anyone new to either subject can readily follow. I recommend his later work ‘Why There Almost Certainly Is a God’ for its clarity of thought and expression. In my view, only Alister McGrath (whose short book ‘The Dawkins Delusion’ takes that well-known atheist Richard Dawkins to task for some of the nonsense he has spouted about belief in God) rivals him. Both have an ability to describe in an authoritative and accessible way the complex interaction between religion and science and whether the latter debunks the former and naturally leads to atheism (which is what Richard Dawkins thinks). In this brief book (it has just over a hundred pages), Ward provides a simple guide to Christian belief and contemporary Christian thinking. He begins with a description of the Big Bang that is a masterly summary in just a few paragraphs of that complicated subject. From there he goes on to discuss the Old Testament and the New Testament; how Christians perceive Jesus as a fulfilment of a Hebrew prophetic tradition described in the Bible; the development of other religions (such as Islam) and their relationship to Christianity; and modern Christian practice and beliefs. Indeed, there is much more than that, all in 112 succinctly expressed pages of very readable prose. ‘Christianity: A Guide for the Perplexed’ is a superb book that will fascinate anyone - whether believer, agnostic or atheist - with an interest in the history, the development and the tenets of the Christian faith.