This second part of the divine trilogy is less hallucinatory than the first and is based primarily on the Kabbalah (Jewish esotericism). We see the emergence of Yah (God), Zina (whose enigmatic character discovers the true nature at the end), Elias Tate (reincarnation of Elijah the Prophet). The main hero seems Herb Asher, poor human who becomes embroiled in combat between God and Belial (Satan), which depend on the outcome of the fight. In short we are embarked in three parallel universes and the author takes us briskly from one to another without notice. Those who love the mental juggling will be served, the others will spin. But we always have fun too!