A very impressive commentary that has an incredible amount of content: including for almost every section of Exodus detailed discussions on the sources used, the history of redaction, tradition, then using these insights to gain a fuller understanding of how the text functions in its present form. There are also discussions on the New Testament interpretations and uses of the passage, the history of Jewish and Christian exegesis of the passage, and taking all of this into account theological reflections on what we today can learn from it.
There was a heavy focus on speculative source and redaction criticism which, I felt, took space away from discussion on the present form of the text and so aspects more conservative exegetes would note were not mentioned. There was also very little space to understand the relationship between Exodus and history which I thought was another weakness. The history of exegesis too, though very interesting, did not always obviously add to the understanding of the actual text.
On the other hand, the theological reflections at the end of all the other discussions were particularly helpful and the book was worth reading even just for those.