This book is for those who want to read the Bible but don't know how to go about it. It has been planned as a modest, yet ambitous guide to the Old Testament.
My local priest lent this book to me so I hoped I would love it. Really, it's not as good as it might have been. At times very insightful, at others kind of boring. It does offer a more history-based explanation of how the Old Testament came to be written, but it might prove - despite being a Catholic book - somewhat disillusioning for readers who are of a more literalist stance regarding the Word of God. I am not exactly of that camp, and it should be known if much of the OT was compiled from all over the place, condensing many events into more symbolically-charged mythologies - indeed, it makes much more sense to think of it that way - but I still found it a sometimes unpleasant experience seeing just how wrong (if this book be right) so many Christians are regarding popular Biblical stories.
Does it affect my love of the Old Testament: Of course not.
Does it enrich my love of the Old Testament: Well, not really. I just have a more historically-informed, if less grandiose idea of how it all (allegedly) came together.
Is it worth reading: Probably. But there are likely better books of this sort available now.
This was a slow and ponderous read for me. I took it on to help with seminary studies. While I found it dry, it did help in framing the stories and giving a sense of where they fit in history.