Jerry Rhodes noted in an interview published in the
University of Delaware's
UDaily that Hanley's work celebrates the ability of
South Park to confront issues that make most viewers uncomfortable. Victor Greto wrote in
The News Journal, that though some of the humor in the book "falls flat", most readers will laugh out loud, but also squirm a bit. Greto went on to note the book's proclivity towards certain racial epithets and language, as well as a critique of religion. Religions analyzed in the work include
Scientology and the
Xenu mythology, as presented in the
South Park episode,
Trapped in the Closet, which Hanley discusses in comparison to elements of
Christianity and the
virgin birth. == References ==