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About The Book
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Author
The first five books of the Bible contain many of its most famous stories populated by vivid characters altogether human in their triumphs and failings--and an equally complicated deity. Many works of Western art and literature appeal to these stories from Michelangelos painting of Adam and Eve to a novel like William Faulkners Go Down Moses. The three great Abrahamic religions (Judaism Christianity and Islam) are rooted here. So is much of Western political theory and constitutional polity for a good half of these books contains legislation (torah) of various kinds as indicated by the ancient title: the book of the Torah. Law and narrative together render the character of the ancient covenant community known as Israel as well as the God who rules over that community. In this revised and expanded version of his popular book of 1988 Mann engages literary criticism and theology in attending both to the composite nature of the Torah (or Pentateuch) and to its final canonical shape. Manns study provides a lucid introduction to the heart of the Hebrew Bible suitable for students and general readers but also of interest to biblical scholars. Manns study of the foundational texts of biblical faith has long been a reliable staple of pedagogy and interpretation. In it he combines a well-honed capacity for critical judgment with an acute theological sensibility all of which is presented in an accessible format. For these reasons this new edition is a welcome offer. In it he has . . . added materials that could not have been on the horizon in the first edition. This book will evoke many grateful readers. --Walter Brueggemann Columbia Theological Seminary Praise for the first edition: I would find this volume extremely useful in introducing my students to this basic part of the Old Testament. I am quite excited about this project. --Patrick D. Miller author of Stewards of the Mysteries of God A sound piece of work. Its holistic final-form approach reflects the major trend in biblical criticism. It is perceptive sensitive thoughtful and stimulating. --David Gunn coauthor of Narrative in the Hebrew Bible Thomas W. Mann has taught at Princeton Theological Seminary Converse College Salem College and Wake Forest University. For twenty-three years he was also the minister of Parkway United Church of Christ in Winston Salem North Carolina. He is the author of The Book of the Former Prophets (Cascade Books 2011) a sequel to this book; Deuteronomy (1995); and God of Dirt: Mary Oliver and the Other Book of God (2004).