“Genesis, Evolution, and the Search for a Reasoned Faith . . . covers important ground in a clear and concise manner. There is material on Genesis, on evolutionary biology, on Darwin and the place of humans, and then a general wrap-up about some of the perennial problems of faith and of the significance of science—suffering for instance, and whether the thinking of Teilhard de Chardin is still relevant to us today. It is more obviously a text than the Giberson-Collins book, with questions for study and so forth. But as I have said, I think it would be a great introduction for a younger reader.”