The Victor Journey through the Bible is a valuable tool for students, from middle-school age to adulthood. The language is easy to understand. Many maps, photos, sketches, diagrams, and illustrations help orient the reader to biblical times and places. The format of the volume is story by story, from Genesis to Revelation. Each story includes a reference to the Bible chapters and verses. Each story is titled with a topic. With each topic, phrases tell specifically what the reader will find concerning that topic on certain pages. There is a Table of Contents at the beginning and an Index at the back of the book, complete with topics and page numbers. Although I read this volume cover to cover, the Contents and Index make the book a great reference to save for future study periods.
I commend V. Gilbert Beers for accomplishing the Herculean task of summarizing the Bible! I particularly appreciated his family tree diagrams, his military elucidations, and his city descriptions. As many will attest, one's eyes can easily glaze over when reading lots of those names without background knowledge. The Victor Journey gave me memorable contexts to grasp for them all!
There were a few passages that I found the "safe road" was taken, avoiding controversies. Although it seemed cowardly to me, I do sympathize with the fact that the whole Bible needed to be covered. Some opportunities missed were the following: there was no mention of why Abel's offering was accepted yet Cain's was not (innocent blood), the Genesis 6 sons of God/daughters of men was glossed over, and there is no clear reason given as to why Sodom was destroyed. There is a weak explanation as to why Jesus's birthday is considered to be Dec 25/Jan 6. There is no explanation given how Jesus' death on Friday could manage to fit three days and three nights in before a resurrection on Sunday. In the passage about John the Baptizer, it is stated as a fact that he ate locusts, but later, carob tree pods are mentioned as an alternative explanation. I know that anyone can slice and dice a book like this endlessly, so I won't belabor the point. Honestly, I commend 95% of the book as very well worth reading.