"Bolle, with training and a long history of teaching and publication in the history of religions, has written an accessible overview to the subject. Bolle goes beyond introducing the major thinkers and their ideas to locating them in their broader socio-cultural contexts and illuminating their contributions biographically. ....[I]nteresting and enlivening...." —Religious Studies Review"Writing with a minimum amount of technical jargon, Bolle provides an accessible study of the data and questions about religion found in every human civilization. This book will interest all who are concerned about the place of religious life and thought in the modern world. Recommended. All Levels." —Choice"Aptly titled, this is a scintillating and intellectually satisfying survey of centuries of serious religious study focusing less on the specifics of different traditions than on the question why we worship. Drawing on the varied disciplines of philosophy, theology, anthropology, and history and the expertise of past masters of the history of religion—Ibn Khaldun, Max Müller, G. van der Leeuw, Raffaele Pettazzoni, Mircea Eliade, and countless others—Bolle is eager to provide a hermeneutics for the 21st century, offering an updated explanation and understanding of what religion is and why we should know about it. Bolle covers both Eastern and Western traditions, and because his first rule is that 'you should listen to the people whose religion you try to comprehend,' readers cannot help but to have their view of religions deepened and broadened. Extensive bibliographies at the end of each chapter will fuel interest and authoritatively guide librarians seeking to build their own collections. Recommended for all academic libraries and large public libraries." —Library Journal"Bolle's passion for hermeneutics and his conviction that the study of religion becomes really interesting when students confront not only the fascinating data of religion, but also the demanding methodological and epistemological questions of the discipline, make this book an inspiration to read." —Jess Hollenback, University of Wisconsin, La Crosse"The Enticement of Religion is the product of Kees Bolle's lifelong quest for understanding of religion. As a sustained essay on hermeneutics (he prefers 'epistemology'), it is, indeed, an enticing alternative to the post-modernist studies in critical discourse so pervasive in today's intellectual world—a refreshingly innovative approach free of subservience to current fashion." —William W. Malandra, University of Minnesota"This book will serve well undergraduate majors in religious studies, students commencing graduate study in the field, and anyone interested in religion and religions who wishes to be introduced to the major issues, problems, and thinkers emergent in the context of western intellectual history. Bolle's probings are worthy of the careful attention of all who are open to being seriously engaged in the data of religions." —F. Stanley Lusby, University of Tennessee, Knoxville"Bolle brings years of learning, wisdom, wit and grace to present to the undergraduate student the question: how should one study religion? Bolle wears his learning lightly and has presented a lucid, non-technical text and draws from numerous religious traditions to make his points. The book is very readable." —Implicit Religion