"This book shows not only how the 76 million boomers have been shaped by such seeking but how they have remapped the spiritual landscape for all Americans; boomers have shifted attention from the institution to the individual, emphasized 'lived religion' (religion in practice) and created a 'quest culture'."--Publishers Weekly "Baffingly diverse and in a state of historic flux, American religion today defies easy generalization. Wade Clark Roof has tackled the challenge admirably, doing a yeoman's job at compiling vast amounts of often surprising information."--Los Angeles Times "Roof's work thoughtfully articulates the introspective fluidity of the baby-boom generation he studies."--Publishers Weekly "What does it mean [to be] spiritual? That's what Roof has set out to ask and to answer: to track, capture, and name the current varieties of religious or spiritual experience in America. What he's come up with is a kind of metaphysical seed-catalog, a bewildering array of groups and sub-groups, beliefs and opinions, views and world-views, much of it mixed and matched."--Mark Buchanan, Books & Culture "Roof writes in a jargon-free, accessible style, often lucidly summarizing (and challenging) the arguments of other sociologists and cultural observers."--Choice "This is a terrific book ... Roof clearly demonstrates the old saw that people create their gods, not vice versa."--The Key Reporter, Phi Beta Kappa "Full of interesting findings and provocative interpretations."--Sociology of Religion "This is a seminal study for the sociology of religion. It should be considered indispensable to anyone trying to take the spiritual pulse of America."--John A. Coleman, S.J., Spiritus "A significant contribution to understanding trends in the lived religion of many Americans in their question for meaning."--Jackson W. Carroll, Journal of the American Academy of Religion