Based on a prolonged series of sermons, as many of his writings seem to be, this is an accessible if frustrating commentary on the early chapters of Genesis. Boice was for some time an influential voice in American, and therefore because of its commercial power, global reformed evangelicalism, preparing the way for much of what we see in the Gospel Coalition etc. A fierce devotee of Biblical inerrancy this obviously shapes his reading of this most contested of Biblical chapters when it comes to reconciling the text with scientific and historical records. Given its size and scope, and Boice's reputation for scholarship, this is a comprehensive exposition of these texts, although the direction taken in some chapters is somewhat tangential and a symptom of its origin as a series of sermons. But whilst he gives the illusion of evaluating scientific and archaeological material which would challenge the established conservative evangelical reading of these stories, he often misrepresents or misunderstands the scientific evidence and does not subject favourable "evidence" or anecdotes to the same level of scrutiny. Nor does he give much weight to Jewish understandings of the text (particularly those midrashes that do not treat the text as a historical record). I actually have much more time for older, more traditional commentaries from a similar perspective, because Boice wilfully ignores compelling textual and historical evidence that suggests that the writing or curation of the stories was not as ancient as he and others would argue, which ironically, strikes me as much more disrespectful of the scriptures.