Unapologetic: Why, despite everything, Christianity can still make surprising emotional sense by Francis Spufford
According to the blurb, this book takes on Dawkins's The God Delusion, and Hetchens's God Is Not Great. I haven't read either, but I've read a fair bit of Dawkins and his writing style is usually clear and well argued, full of wonder at the world.
I'm afraid Spufford's writing doesn't come up to the same standard. This is partly due to the subject matter: In his works on evolution Dawkins is dealing with tangibles. If they aren't tangible now, they've definitely been tangible in the past, before they were evolved out of existence. Spufford is dealing with the transcendent yet immanent presence of the intent behind everything. See? See how you end up using airy-fairy language as soon as you try talking about this stuff? It just happens!
That being said, Spufford's experiences of God (for want of a better word) are similar to my own, so I was with him, all the way. He captures the Anglican mindset beautifully, and he says a lot of things I would like to say but CBA due to being shouted down by the forces of secularity, ie this forum and my friend Jane who thinks I'm a defective because I go to church.
So, if you want to know why people like me believe in God against all the opposing noise, then read this book. Read it in a quiet, empty church if possible. While you're there, just listen.