New; pristine. See scans and description. First Edition Thus, and First Printing, of the graphics-rich Alexian Limited 2013 edition. New Metro Books / Sterling Publishing Co., Inc. and Alexian Limited, 2013. First Edition Thus and First Printing. Tall octavo, illustrated jacket, illustrated semi-gloss boards, black endpapers, 192 pp. New; pristine. See scans. A sumptuously illustrated presentation of DeSalvo's scholarly, rich and readable 2009 text on the still-mysterious Dead Sea Scrolls, in first/first form as such, and top condition. See scans. For the collector. LT20
I think that this could have been a better book if the author had credited some of his sources with footnotes or endnotes. Too often the words "some believe" or "some experts believe" were followed by an assertion that was not referenced in any way. Poor proof reading resulted in more typos and incomplete sentences than I am comfortable with, and the condescending tone of the book causes me to think that it was basically written for the high school crowd.
On the plus side, the book is an introduction to the scrolls at a very basic entry level, and therefore not over the head of someone who, like me, would be reading about the scrolls for the very first time. Some very nice photos were employed to drive the main teaching points home. In short, a decent entry-level read that could have been easily improved with a little effort.
I really enjoyed this. They tried really hard to seem impartial through out. The biggest issue is I feel like there is so much more to read on this subject that just wasn't there.
Mooi geïllustreerd boek. Leuke introductie op de dode zeerollen. Helaas staan er een aantal spellingsfouten en grammaticale fouten in. Ook staan er sommige fouten in, zoals dat het NT tussen 70 en 90 is geschreven (terwijl Paulus zijn brieven voor 70 schreef) en dat David alle 150 psalmen heeft geschreven. Ook worden zinnen soms letterlijk herhaald. Ten slotte zijn sommige statements verwarrend; eerst zegt de auteur dat hij denkt dat de Qumran gemeenschap misschien wel een vroegchristelijke gemeenschap (p170), later zegt hij dat we de conclusie kunnen trekken dat er geen contact was tussen Qumran en Christenen (p176), waarna hij weer argumenten geeft dat de Qumrangemeenschap en vroege christenen contact hadden (p178-9).
Facinating book about the Dead Sea Scrolls. Beautifully designed book with great photos and artwork. Provides different insights on the Essenes sect community. The Jewish and Christian interpretations, history and discoveries that are still yet to be found from the Cooper Scroll treasures. The secrecy surrounding the Dead Sea Scrolls since their discovery starting in 1947. Are Jesus, John the Baptist, in contact with the Essene community? Is Jesus the Messiah mentioned? Have any of the Temple Treasures been discovered from the Cooper Scroll treasure map like details? Now I want to read more about the Dead Sea Scrolls and stay updated on it. Amazing book!
The proofreading in this book is atrocious. The sheer volume of grammatical errors significantly takes away from the content of the book. Additionally, the writing is reminiscent of a high school essay. I question whether the author actually wrote the book or did the research and had someone else write the book. The grammatical writing is an embarrassment and I’m surprised the author (who has a PHD) attached his name to something like this.
Very detailed account of ancient texts and the Dead Sea Scrolls. Beautiful photographs and short paragraphs so it's easy to read and understand.
I bought this book after seeing the Dead Sea Scrolls at Denver's Museum of Nature and Science in March of 2018. The book was for sale in the gift shop, but I found it for much less on amazon.com.
This was a useful and graphical explanation of Qumran and Essenes Sect round time of Jesus and John the Baptist. I learned heaps re archaeology of this small window of time. The different biblical fragments and alternative documents or translations were fascinating and helped me dig deeper into spiritual truth of scriptures e.g. Messiah coming.
This book was insightful; however it lacked proper editing and grammar checking. It was a pain to read but bearable due to its short length. I would recommend a different book on the Dead Sea Scrolls.
Nice introduction to the Dead Sea Scrolls but not a deep book. You will want to move on to other books if you want more info about the translations, actual archaeology, biblical differences... Again really good intro, lots of photos and context, easy read.