The Good Book's organizational system is similar to that of the Bible. It is divided into fourteen books. Each book is divided into short chapters, and each chapter is divided into numbered verses, so that chapter and verse can be referenced numerically. The volume's final book features a version of the Ten Commandments :
Love well
Seek the good in all things
Harm no others
Think for yourself
Take responsibility
Respect nature
Do your utmost
Be informed
Be kind
Be courageous
These come with the post-thought that the reader "at least, sincerely try" and an addendum in, "Add to these ten injunctions, this: O friends, let us always be true to ourselves and to the best in things, so that we can always be true to one another."
Reception
The book received a variety of different reviews. The book was well covered in the New York Times and given a warm reception on The Colbert Report. Genevieve Fox, writing in the Telegraph, "If the humanists are in the ascendant, then Grayling's self-help book for the spiritually rudderless will be snapped up", while Christopher Hart, writing in the Sunday Times concluded that: "Compared to the original, it’s a molehill at the foot of Everest". Reviews in The Observer and Private Eye satirised the book for its arbitrary rejection of religious content and the proselytising of the author. It received a positive review in the Sunday Express, where Terry Waite praised it "as a source for inspiration and wisdom". A review in the Irish Independent concluded that "to try to compose a secular bible is itself a well-intentioned undertaking. But can it ever have anything like the influence of the Bible...no". In the Religious Journal First Things, R.J. Snell writes "While the marketing presents the author as provocateur, one finds instead the reflections of a decent, middle-aged man with a thorough education, now thinking about his loves and aspirations in light of the erosive power of time. Grayling ignores religion more than he attacks it." In an Evening Standard article celebrating the King James Version of the Bible, David Sexton attacks several books by atheist authors and describes The Good Book as "unreadable, not merely just because it is boring but because it is nauseating". Grayling discussed The Good Book with the Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, before a large audience on London's South Bank, and with Richard Holloway, former Bishop of Edinburgh, at the 2011 Edinburgh Book Festival. In a YouTube video at the Sydney Writers Festival, Grayling responded to criticisms of the Good Book stating, "some of the reviews have been hysterically hostile".
Editions
The Good Book: A Humanist Bible. New York: Walker, 2011..
The Good Book: A Secular Bible. London: Bloomsbury, 2011..
The Good Book: A Secular Bible. Revised Version. London: Bloomsbury, 2016..