The Wisdom of Proverbs: An Essential Guide to Proverbs is by Bob Beasley. It is a commentary of sorts on the book of Proverbs in the Bible. The structure is pretty simple and repeated continuously throughout the book. After an introductory chapter in which he describes some of the ways the various proverbs are constructed, he begins his general comments. Mr. Beasley gives a two three paragraph introduction to each chapter. Then he works through the chapter in a verse by verse fashion. He will quote one verse or sometimes more if they flow together; he uses the NIV. After the verses he writes a few paragraphs; they constitute a devotional/commentary of sorts; then he gives some short examples from the Bible and finishes with a prayer of two or three sentences. The method works well and is easily used for personal study. Each sequence described above is no longer than a couple of pages, so stopping after a prayer is convenient.
The author has written other materials, some on Proverbs including one with his wife entitled Wisdom for Women based on Chapter 31 of Proverbs. He is a graduate of Westminster Theological Seminary in California; he was in property development for years and had a good-sized business until retirement. Some of his commentary reflects his experiences in the business world. The book is theologically sound in my estimation, and it is practical in some of its advice, but it is based on Proverbs, so that is what one would expect. It reads easily; it is not an ivory tower theological tome.
Personally I have been reading a chapter in Proverbs every day for over 30 years, so this was a welcome way to deviate a bit; it did take me about 45 days to read it, however. Sometimes I wondered why the author took the tack he did in his comments, but the comments always had some relevance to the Scripture being cited. Although I did not find any astonishing new insights, the author’s comments were thoughtful and sometimes caused me to think a little more deeply on a given proverb. I identified with him on a few reflections since they were quite similar to my own. I chuckled when he mentioned how he immediately thought of a pioneer family when reading 24:27. When I see that verse, I think of my grandparents homesteading on the Dakota prairie and living in a soddy and building the barn before they built their house. It’s probably a generational thing, but he ties it in nicely with getting one’s priorities straight.
It is a book for devotions and for reference. I believe it has a place in most people’s libraries as it is good for reference and also good for devotional reading. Mine is on a kindle, but I am considering purchasing the physical book even though I have already read it.