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Most helpful customer reviews
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Time To Upgrade?,
By Pastor J (Toronto, Ontario) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The New Oxford Annotated Bible New Revised Standard Version (Leather Bound)
The Fourth Edition of the New Oxford Annotated Bible has been upgraded in all the ways Oxford claims. It is a bit more compact than older editions, as the font size appears to have been slightly reduced. However, the font is very legible and font, paper, and binding remain the finest of any competitor. The same remains true of the leather cover. But, instead of the more conventional leather of the past, the Fourth Edition leather cover has a distinctive and very comfortable glove-like feel. As for comparison, I have two previous editions of the NOAB, as well as the New Interpreter's Study Bible, the NIV Study Bible, and others. Among all options, I feel the NOAB Fourth edition and the NISB are the runaway best. And if one does much bible reading, it is really great owning both of them. However, if only one must be chosen, I'd recommend the NOAB Fourth Edition. Or, if you're wondering if an upgrade from an older edition of the NOAB is worth it, I'd definitely say that it is. Until now, I would've given the New Interpreter's a slight edge over the New Oxford study bibles. But, the NOAB Fourth Edition has made significant updates and has put Oxford on top.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta) Amazon.com:
4.2 out of 5 stars (29 customer reviews) 343 of 347 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Three versions -- are you sure you're buying the right one?,
By Bibliophile "aseason" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The New Oxford Annotated Bible with Apocrypha 9520A: New Revised Standard Version, College Edition (Hardcover)
The New Oxford Annotated Bible with Apocrypha: New Revised Standard Version has three separate ISBNs. Take a look at the following differences to help you differentiate:ISBN 978-0195289596 is the college edition. According to Oxford University Press, this simply means that this version does not have the concordance. This will have fewer pages than the other two versions. ISBN 978-0195289558 is the hardcover edition. ISBN 978-0195289565 is the hardcover index edition, meaning there are little tabs on the side of each page, indicating books of the bible. I found this information by contacting Oxford University Press Customer Service. There's a toll free number that's easily accessible. Simply use your favourite search engine to find their site, then click on their "Contact Us" link. Hope this helps people out there! 152 of 162 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars
THE BEST BIBLE YOU'LL NEVER USE,
By David Dunaway - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The New Oxford Annotated Bible with Apocrypha: New Revised Standard Version (Hardcover)
I LOVE the Oxford Annotated and use it along with the HarperCollins and New Interpreter's for my work in seminary and at church, and I have recommended the Oxford to literally hundreds of people. When I found out that a new edition had been released, I announced it in our church newsletter and I went ahead and bought 15, meaning to sell them to our members at cost or to give them as gifts. Why 1 star? It's because1) THE PAPER ON WHICH IT IS PRINTED IS A BAD JOKE. Just like the New Interpreter's, you cannot open and close the thing without having the pages bend back upon themselves. The pages become crumpled with even the gentlest use. 2) CONTENT DOESN'T MATTER IF YOU CANNOT READ THE PRINT. There are two factors at play here. The font is miniscule and the paper is virtually transparent. How they printed this in the first place is a miracle of science. 3) PEOPLE NEED THIS BIBLE IN THEIR HANDS. I gave this Bible to two separate people who had said that they wanted one. I asked them to be honest and let me know if they thought that they would have trouble reading it. Both of them handed their copies back to me saying "No, thank you." - even with the Church picking up half the cost. Dear Whoever Makes These Decisions: I work hard to convince people that they need to get a first-class, academic Study Bible. It is a hard sell because they are so bound to their "relevant", "real world", (Shall I go on?), quasi-scholarly, agenda-driven, anything but the NRSV, Devotional Bibles. Please believe me when I say that those of us who care about the wonderful work that you do are willing to carry around larger, heavier Bibles if what we get is stronger, more opaque paper, and larger fonts. We would be HAPPY to pay more if you would improve the printing and bind the books so that they can stand up to the years of use that the Oxford Annotated, HarperCollins and New Interpreter's warrant. I would be DELIGHTED to see a post from a representative of Oxford University Press, HarperCollins, or Abingdon Press saying that you plan to reexamine your printing decisions. For what it's worth, whichever of you guys comes out with a physical product that approaches your outstanding scholarship, will have my order and another 100 to go with it. P.S.: Anybody want 15 unreadable Bibles? I'm selling them cheap. 57 of 59 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly: This is No Third Edition,
By Michael Kear - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The New Oxford Annotated Bible New Revised Standard Version (Leather Bound)
The Good. The binding on this Bible is very good. The genuine leather feels wonderful in the hands. The construction is what we've come to expect from Oxford.The Bad. The print in this edition is horrible compared to the wonderful print in the Third Edition. I miss the easy on the eyes type and the justified margins of the Third. The print in the Fourth is bold but smaller and crowded and hard on the eyes. The theological revisions are OK at best. Again, I miss the scholarship of the Third Edition. I immediately noticed that the commentary on the "homosexual" passages has moved decidedly to the right in the Fourth Edition (which is fine for those who hold to a more conservative evangelical cultural position). The Ugly. I wish that Oxford would once again offer their genuine leather Bibles with a choice of thumb index or not. I really do not like thumb indexed Bibles at all and would love to have the option to get an Oxford nice Bible without them. |
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