Recommended.
J. Sienkiewicz, CHOICE
Rea's proposal about the wide accessibility of experiential encounters with God is both a breath of fresh air in the context of the philosophical debate about hiddenness and is enormously valuable from a pastoral perspective. In sum, this is an excellent book that substantially furthers the discussion of ADH by challenging some of its deepest assumptions, assumptions that even most of Schellenberg's theistic interlocutors have simply taken for granted.
Max Baker-Hytch, The Journal of Religion
I suspect this book will be a staple in the literature of the hiddenness problem. Rea’s transcendence defense, like the skeptical theist defense, is formidable. His argument about how God relates to people more than they think is going to be more controversial and probably selectively successful with people who already hold certain dispositions. As I mentioned before, I think anyone personally or academically interested in the problem of divine hiddenness should read this book. It is well written, multidisciplinary, and compelling.
Ben Whittington, Reading Religion
[P]astorally insightful and academically rigorous.
Michael J. Dodds O.P., The Thomist: A Speculative Quarterly Review