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September 25, 2007

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Agreed. The NRSV XL is awful, IMO. But the standard is good.
I suppose there are few quality editions of the NRSV because
publishers are worried about sales. I think it is quite good,
although I don't like it as much as the RSV. There are places
I don't like it and places that are very good. The very good
ones far out number the bad ones.

Thanks for the post. My Oxford NRSV Pocket Bible split a week ago and I'm in the market for a new one. I'm a seminary student who prefers the NRSV, but for hospital and home visits, a pocketable bible is really nice.

I'm not sure what I'll buy, but you've been quite helpful. I'm going to blog on my old bible after Christmas, and will link to your post.

http://adamcopeland.wordpress.com

Hi. I recently had my own run-in with the new Harper NRSV Bibles and I have to say I am one of those people who is driven nuts by the bleedthrough. Yes the books are beautiful, but reading them is a chore. Why do we accept bleedthrough in the most important book in our lives?

I really wish that there were more option in NRSV as well. I go back and forth about using it as my main translation and if I ever found a decent edition I would probably make the switch. I can even deal with crappy bonded leather, just give me decent margins and single column. The hardback just wouldn't work for me.

I bought the Standard and the bleed through is horrid. The single column is good and would have been excellent with wider margins. The Duotone wrap over the hardcover is OK but leather or Duotone flex would have been better.

For a few hours I had the Go Anywhere but returned it. Nothing good can be said about it. It won't open comfortably let alone flat. The font is too light and too thin. The format begs for single column and we get two very narrow columns with enough hyphenation to make anyone go mad. I will stick to my compact RSV CE 2nd Edition for travel. It is truly able to go anywhere.

Thanks for the interesting read.

I have the New Revised Standard Version Bible and am currently happy with it. http://store.bibles.com/products/ABS_NEW/104911.aspx

I have recently found your website via Better Bibles blog, and find it fascinating. I thought I might point you towards another edition of the NRSV that you might find interesting, and that I only recently discovered myself.

I only came to the NRSV rather late, unfortunately, having usually restricted myself to the NASB95 as being my preferred translation although I have a number of others too, such as the NIV, TNIV, RSV, ESV etc., all in varying styles. Like you I also preferred my copies to be leather-bound, but it was the purchase of a TruTone pocket ESV for my daughter that changed my mind. She is a vegetarian and therefore doesn't want much to do with leather. The ESV I bought her she loved as it looked and felt exactly like leather - only it isn't leather at all! It's also durable, can be wiped clean if necessary, and there are now so many lovely bindings using this material it's difficult not to admire it.

Here in the UK the choice for decent NRSV's is very limited, especially in pocket-size, which I find rather surprising as the NRSV has been out for such a long time. But I was browsing our local Christian book shop and found this bible - ISBN10 000724245X - and have fallen in love with it. It is Anglicised which is superb as, although I acknowledge the work Americans have done in translation, it is so nice to have a bible in English English rather than American English. Although Amazon describes it as leather bound, it isn't. It's this same artificial material and it looks and feels very soft and supple. It is the only bible copy that I have which I am truly happy with my, and I now carry it everywhere with me. It's small, easy to carry, lays open flat without having to be held down, has plenty of space at the back for notes, and looks and feels lovely.

The only drawbacks are 1/ The text is a little small, but provided I carry my reading glasses with me for when my eyes are tired, that isn't a problem. 2. It doesn't have any marker ribbons, but again, that isn't really much of an issue.

If you like I can send you some photos of the copy I have so you can see what it is like for yourself. Let me know and I can get right onto that for you.

Now, if I could only find an Anglicised version of the combined NRSV/BCP, lol.

Reviving a long dead thread, I just came across the NRSV Go-Anywhere Compact Thinline Bible, to be published in September (and will come in versions with and with Apocrypha):

http://tinyurl.com/nwxttp

There's no way to see the contents, but we can hope that it's a shrunken down version of the single column Standard. The dimensions look like they would fit the bill for "short and stout" as Mark would like to see. It looks like it could be quite handy.

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  • J. Mark Bertrand lectures at Worldview Academy and is the author of Rethinking Worldview: Learning to Think, Live, and Speak in This World (Crossway, 2007). After spending most of his life in Houston, Texas, he now lives with his wife Laurie in South Dakota. He has a BA in English from Union University and an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Houston, where he worked as production editor of the literary magazine Gulf Coast. For several years, he served on the board of Strange Land Literacy Foundation, a non-profit promoting literature, theology, culture studies and fellowship in Houston. Until recently, he was the fiction editor at Relief Journal, where he now serves on the advisory board.

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