First off, I do think this is a really good book and I'm glad I bought it. The pictures are very wonderful to look at it, each page could provoke lots of discussion for kids and parents. I would even recommend this to adults to read on their own time.
BUT--I do feel a little uneasy about the way this book presents itself. On the cover it says it is written with a forward by a rabbi, but the real author is only on the back cover. Perhaps because the publisher thought that Jews would notice the lack of Jewish last names involved in this book and question it's mission and validity. The truth is, the book does contain a few historical commentaries with direct reference to Jesus. It also states a few things about the old testament in ways that traditional hebrew schools definetly would not, such as it's relationship to the New Testament, and who it was written by.
I would recommend this as a great book for Interfaith families, and Christian families, and Jewish families, of course. But for religous Jews who want to introduce the idea of other religions to their children on their own time in their own way, please be aware that this book may speed up that process a bit.
I only gave it three stars because I wish the publishers weren't so sneaky when they marketed this book. I think they should have promoted its dual-religous reference as a positive thing, which I believe it is.