Full disclosure, I didn’t finish this book. Didn’t even get halfway through. I couldn’t. When you’re ten pages in and you read that “scripture comes from the Greek word for writing”, your eyes roll so far back into your head that it’s hard to continue. I mean, Greek is LIKE Latin, right? They’re both old, and the author clearly knows little about either of them, so they share that. Other than the fact that they are entirely different languages, they’re the same thing.
It was such a great idea, and had a couple good elements, namely the illustrations and photos, but overall it read like badly researched Reformed Fanfiction. It’s not a scholarly work, and won’t impress anyone who knows much of anything about scriptural history, etymology, manuscripts, or how to Google, but as a basic primer for Protestant teenagers, intelligent children, or Evangelical adults who want to know about the Bible, but only enough to be able to say what a good thing it was for the world that Luther came along to fix Christianity, it works. You have sentences like “the centuries awaited the reforms of Wycliffe and Luther” in the very first chapter, and wonder if you picked up a bosom-heaver or a historical work. How this book got published I have no idea, unless they fired all the fact checkers and exclusively hired editors who belonged to the Sola Reforma fan club.