<p>During the 1980s religious conservativism gained momentum in Egypt after military defeats and major social and economic upheavals. A few months after Sadat&rsquo;s assassination by religious extremists in 1981 a column appeared in Al-Ahram responding to letters of Egyptians caught in the problems of daily living. The columnist Abdul Wahab al-Mutawa a self-proclaimed humanist published complaints about government services and offered solutions to personal problems. He felt people suffered from straying too far from time-tested social traditions. &nbsp;He saw some good in religious conservativism when people sought happiness in family life but criticized radicals with unrealistic dreams through messages embedded in his columns.</p><p><br />&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;Also appearing were advice columns written by religious sheikhs mostly affiliated with Al-Azhar University. These columns described Islam&rsquo;s relevance to modern life and answered questions on religious practice. As competitors it&rsquo;s easier to see how these columns were shaped to counter the extremists. But these state-salaried writers showed a perplexing ambivalence by sometimes supporting the government and sometimes extremists. Only in retrospect can we see why this happened.&nbsp;</p><p><br />This book is the first to plumb the depths of personal experience in the volatile 1980s showing people&rsquo;s desire for moral certainty and laying the groundwork for the disruptions behind the Uprising of 2011. The book describes the columnists&rsquo; prescriptions for leading the good life how they modeled &ldquo;moderation&rdquo; and the influences that discouraged their full candor.&nbsp;</p>