Plenty to say about the wisdom gleaned from this, but suffice to say, I found this to be a great commentary. I flagged dozens of passages as having insight for reading Job, for thinking theologically, or for connecting Job to other aspects of life, literature, or history. I also marked a few dozen places as being possible starting points for blog entries.
I read this with a clergy Bible study and we plan to continue using the Smyth and Helwys series. It had a perspective that expanded possibilities, rather than defending a consolidated interpretation of the book, and when the author did commit to a perspective, he usually explained what else was out there and why he interpreted it thus. There were one or two chapters that seemed less-engaging, though frankly, that may be because the material from Job they were covering already was. All in all, I heartily endorse this volume, and I'm excited to move on to others in this commentary series, though I suppose I'll have to read a few more before acclaiming it as a whole.
Four stars for being a masterfully-executed work in the genre (since I try to reserve my five-star ratings for life-changing or genre-changing reads).