The confusion of sin and evil, or religious and moral transgression, is  the subject of Ronald Paulson’s latest book. He calls attention to the  important distinction between sin and Evil (with a capital E) that in  our times is largely ignored, and to the further confusion caused by the  term “moral values.” Ranging widely through the history of Western  literature, Paulson focuses particularly on American and English works  of the eighteenth through twentieth centuries to discover how questions  of evil and sin—and evil and sinful behavior—have been discussed and  represented. 
