"'What is most compelling about Kierkegaard's encounter with the problem of evil is that it does not take place primarily upon the conceptual level. One has the sense that Kierkegaard himself was well familiar with the back alleys of the human psyche where the impulse to evil is spawned and nurtured. Roberts convincingly recounts Kierkegaard's groundbreaking encounter with the dread of all dreads -- despair itself. And in this encounter the master psychologist may well have given us the most penetrating analysis of the problem of evil that we yet have. Roberts is clear and precise in his presentation, and writes with a sobriety that befits his subject matter. This is an important book, and deserves a place in any library concerned with issues of ethics and religion.' Dr. Stephen Tyman, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale"