Saturday, January 12, 2013

The Handy Guide to New Testament Greek


The Handy Guide to New Testament Greek is not intended for beginner-level Greek learners, but as clearly stated in the introduction, for second-year or beyond Greek students.  The book basically lays out “handy” charts for grammatical and usage references, i.e. syntax, conjugation, phrase diagramming, etc.

Huffman has composed a basic but accessible reference book that would be a great accompaniment to a full-sized textbook, but I think it would also be a useful tool for anyone studying Greek whether in school or out.  I found his inclusion of a Select Bibliography in Greek studies particular helpful in finding other works that could be used alongside the handbook.

All that said, I do have some critiques in terms of layout that might be addressed in future editions:

There’s very little that separates chapters and sections.  The entire book is printed in orange and black.  So if you’re hoping to quickly turn to and recognize a section that you’re studying, you’ll have to first take the time to look in the table of contents and find the page number. 

It seems to me if a press was going to take the resources to print in color, it could have changed up the colors for each section.  Tabs would have been a useful addition too, and maybe even a spiral binding so that the book can sit open flat in the section that you’re studying.  For an example of a great pocket style grammar manual (English not Greek) see Diana Hacker’s “A Pocket Style Manual”.

Also, I didn’t really see the logic in the organization within the three main sections.  Why go from nouns, to adjectives, to adverbs, to articles, to pronouns, to prepositions, to verbs?  It seems a little more logical to group parts of speech in the sense that they affect one another, for example adverbs affect verbs but they’re several pages away from one another. 

Overall, I think this was a great first edition, but I’d love to see a little better approachability in future editions.  There’s not much here that makes it a “quick” reference, just a lighter reference than carrying around a textbook.

The publisher provided a copy of this text in exchange for an honest review.  All opinions are my own.

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

J.R.R. Tolkien: The Making of a Legend


With the recent release of Peter Jackson’s directorial take on The Hobbit, it’s hard not to try to imagine what drove the man who created the fantastical world of Middle Earth.

The elusive answer to that question is the topic of Colin Duriez’s new biography: “J.R.R. Tolkien: The Making of a Legend”.  Duriez does an amazing job of weaving together the stories of Tolkien’s life with the stories he creates.  For example, the farmer that chased J.R.R. Tolkien for picking mushrooms as a child, whom he and his brother nicknamed “the black ogre” (15) or of how the tale of Luthien and Beren in the Silmarillion was symbolic of Tolkien and his wife’s love (109).

I appreciated the scholarship foundational to this biography, but within that, as is the case of most biographies, the book felt like a biography written by a scholar.  It was in many respects a history text: not bad, but not a page-turner by any means.

If you’re looking for a glimpse of Tolkien’s life, this biography is definitely a good start, but I think it’s interest is geared more toward scholars, who might do better with Duriez’s primary sources in the notes.  If you're looking for a good examination of Tolkien's spiritual life, this probably isn't where you need to look either.

I enjoyed reading “The Making of a Legend”, and I think a Tolkein fan would too, but probably not as much as a Tolkein scholar might.

This book was sent to me for review.  All opinions are my own.

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