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May 30, 2009

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Comments

Alex S. Leung

My guess is that the page-layout is the Wide Margin Reference Bible!
Am I right?

The lack of an "Introduction" paragraph to the books of the Bible, as seen in your pics of the first page of 1 Cor & 2 Cor, reminds me of the original 2001 text edition. Most (/all?) 2007 text edition Bibles have an Introduction to each book, eh?

James Flavin - Sydney, australia

Mark,

Love the Space Pen too. Good call.

ChrisB

Re: wear and tear, one benefit to this Bible is you can add hole reinforcements and it's as good as new. If necessary, you can xerox the page and punch holes in that (though, you might not want to tell the publisher that).

David Farlow

Two more listings of the 1977 version NASB

Further reducion in price to sell the last few.

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=130310006191
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=130310006253

David L Humphrey

A close look at 1 Corinthians 1:30-31, in the photo above, indicates that this is the 2007 edition of the ESV text.

Kyle Hedrick

Great post Mark. And I am with James. I have carried a Fisher Space Pen in the fold of my wallet for years.

Blair Paterson

I don't know what the problem is - there are online bibles and bible programs - just print them out - format it anyway you want and then stick it in a binder. YOu can choose your own paper. YOu can choose your own font, even the binder - you can do a 8 1/2 x 11 - or 5 1/5 x 8 1/2 - leather binder, pleather - you can even Rollabind/Levenger it. That's the point isn't it.

cheers

chaplain Rev. Dr. Gene Sipprell

Is it possible to enlarge the print to giant size for seniors?

Runnoe Connally

If the font were increased to 12 point (from the current 9.5) then this loose leaf Bible would be ideal for reading while using an exercise bike! I put in 12-hour days on offshore oil rigs. I don't have much spare time for working out AND reading my Bible. If I could do both at the same time, it would be great. In addition, there are a lot of unused exercise bikes in the homes of overweight Christians. There is a huge market here if some publisher would only realize it.

Bill

@Runroe, you might want to consider a permanently-bound giant print Bible for exercising since you presumably won't be inserting copious notes, which is the main benefit of a loose-leaf Bible.

If you like the KJV, this Oxford USA one at $13 is hard to beat:
ISBN-13: 978-0834003507

It's the size of a notebook, probably about 14point type, but with a cheap binding so you won't feel bad about perspiring stains. I bought one for podium usage but might just adopt a music stand to my treadmill thanks to you!

Since many versions are in the public domain and available for download as text files, you could also consider formatting your own and printing it out on a normal printer, although I fear the page charges could become excessive. However for those of us with strong opinions about typeface, size, layout, and versification, it's a tempting thought! Keep in mind though that typical printer paper is about 5-8x thicker than typical Bible paper so even a monster 4" binder won't hold the complete Bible at 12 point type.

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