Hey Jason,
TD:
He wrote RSR to inoculate members.. you know, give them a little tiny bit of the bad stuff, right along with the apologetic response and hope members will be satisfied believing really smart writers and LDS leaders know the truth and still have a testimony.
Jason:
So because he wrote it from the view point of a believer and still has a testimony the book falls short for you. Hmmmmm.
No, it is exactly what Bushman and the LDS leaders wanted. I think it was a step toward more open disclosure but I'm pretty sure even Bushman would admit it was an apologetic work.
The book was good book, a fair book. Bushman even stated up front that he was a believer and that no one is unbiased, not even you TD. In much of the book had gave no apologetic spin at all, in my opinion, but rather presented the facts and let readers decide. In other areas he did give an apologetic response. The one area I found rather strained was baout the money digging and magic issues preparing him to be a prophet.
Exactly my point. Bushman is open that the book is an apologetic work which it very much is. Of course we are all biased. (And yeah, that part about money digging is a good example of what I am taking about).
I'm just making the point that if someone wants to learn about Joseph Smith, Bushman's bio, while a step in the right direction is still very much written to convince members the LDS church is the one and only true church upon the earth, and that Joseph Smith was a great and noble man who was called by God to restore the true church upon the earth.
I'm pretty sure Bushman would be agree with me.
~td~