I have looked at the first two volumes in this commentary, and here is a brief review.
Craig Keener’s Acts: An Exegetical Commentary is a vast and incomplete piece of scholarship. It is vast because in print form it is over 2100 pages. It is incomplete because these two volumes only cover up to Acts 14:28. For the purpose of this review, I am looking at the digital version on my Logos software. I have not read every page, of course, so this is not a full scholarly review.
Keener is meticulous. Anyone who has used his previous commentaries on Matthew, John and Revelation will know that. This can be highly beneficial, or at times, frustrating. Almost two-thirds of the complete first volume is introductory material covering such issues as genre (zeroing in on Acts as a work of ancient historiography), historical interpretation of Acts, Acts and Paul, the speeches, the author, audience, Luke’s perspective on women and gender, etc.
Once you get into the commentary proper, you start to see the fruit of his socio-historical approach. The format and layout is relatively straightforward (i.e. no complicated internal structures that require skipping around to find what you need, but at the same time not much in the way of helpful textual layouts as some of the more modern commentaries are offering – such as Schnabel’s on Acts, for instance). As well as relatively straightforward, it is also long. Keener appears to have a meticulous tendency that leads to a massive project like this one. Every detail is engaged and discussed. Other scholarship is engaged and discussed. At times it feels like everything is engaged and discussed.