Reviews study Bibles, new translations, large print editions, children's Bibles, commentaries, and other Bible resources
October 19, 2015
Exquisite! Tyndale Select NLT
For all of my adult life and then some, I’ve been reading the major translations, study editions, and various versions of the Bible, but the new Tyndale Select NLT (New Living Translation) in goatskin is surely one of the best reader editions I’ve ever had the joy of owning, thanks to Tyndale House Publishers, who kindly sent me a free copy for my always-honest review. And, on a scale of 1 to 5, I'd honestly give this exquisite treatment of God’s Word a 10!
First of all, the NLT has continued to be my favorite contemporary version, not only for its intelligent thought-for-thought translation aka dynamic equivalence rendering but for its respectful, poetic tone in easy-to-grasp language.
Even so, in “A Note To Readers,” we learn that the Bible Translation Committee decided “an additional investment in scholarly review and text refinement could make it even better. So shortly after its initial publication, the committee began an eight-year process with the purpose of increasing the level of the NLT’s precision without sacrificing its easy-to-understand quality. This second-generation text was completed in 2004, with minor changes subsequently introduced in 2007, 2013, and 2015.”
The Introduction then goes on to say that “the Bible Translation Committee recruited teams of scholars that represented a broad spectrum of denominations, theological perspectives, and backgrounds within the worldwide evangelical community,” which basically means the diverse committee did not translate the apocryphal aka deuterocanonical books.
Although the Tyndale Select NLT is a reader’s edition with no footnotes except those needed to explain a particular choice of words, the single-column pages allow for cross referencing in the outer margins of the text and a full “Dictionary/Concordance” followed by colored maps in the back matter.
Besides the newly updated text, this gorgeous edition includes: a well-inked, roundish font that’s easy on the eyes; silken Smyth-sewn pages; and the finest quality of covers in a sturdy, soft, huggable goatskin.
I love it!
© 2015, Mary Harwell Sayler, Bible reviewer, is a poet-writer of numerous books in all genres for Christian and educational publishers. She also blogs on poetry, writing, Bible prayers, and Praise Poems.
Tyndale Select NLT, black or brown goatskin
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Pictures?
ReplyDeleteA lady at my church has one of these. She knows I collect Bibles and showed it off to me. I was very impressed with the quality. Especially to be from a major publishing house.usually this kind off quality only comes from a few small highend bible publishers like Allens or Cambridge. There is always usually something every Bible has that I think could have been done better with the issues being different for each one. This NLT Select was perfect from the cover to the sewn binding, paper, ink, font size. I really think this is the best highend Bible ive ever saw and handled. And Ill be saving up to get me one of these. Tyndale earned an A on this one.
ReplyDeleteTrue, true! I like this one a lot, too, but wish Amazon had pictures.
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