Majestie: The King Behind the King James Bible

by David Teems | Biographies & Memoirs |
ISBN: 1595552200 Global Overview for this book
Registered by wingelizardbreathwing of Bella Vista, Arkansas USA on 1/25/2015
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2 journalers for this copy...
Journal Entry 1 by wingelizardbreathwing from Bella Vista, Arkansas USA on Sunday, January 25, 2015
I picked this up today from Family Christian bookstore in Fayetteville, Arkansas.

Journal Entry 2 by wingelizardbreathwing at Bella Vista, Arkansas USA on Monday, October 2, 2017
Ugh!! I'm so glad I'm done with this book!

I read several Tudor history books this summer and figured this book on James I would be a great followup. I should have been more specific with myself. A book on James I would have been a great followup---this particular book was not.

The author relied far too much on secondary sources and quotes. Another reader said it felt like they were reading the Cliff's Notes version of James' life and reign---exactly. I still feel like I know very little about the man. Teems liked to say, "James was James." Or various versions of that; problem is, he didn't give us a clear and thorough portrait of James to begin with.

The thing I found consistently frustrating though was that Teems gives his reader very little credit for possessing a functioning brain. Anyone who has chosen to read this book is already going to know that "plough" is "plow", that "elasticity" means "a good deal of stretch", that a vicar is a pastor. He uses vocabulary and then defines it: "he learned to vacillate. To say one thing and do another." This is needlessly redundant (see what I did there?). It goes on, ad nauseum: a fortnight is two weeks, a physic is medication, a homonym is defined...

I concede there were a few interesting bits. I found this quote to be the most fascinating of all. The author is discussing the influence that Shakespeare may have had on the translation of the KJB: "Remember, the circles in late Elizabethan and early Jacobean London were quite small. And all of this somewhat amazingly took place within a few square miles of earth, and at the same moment in time." Amazing. Also, I thought James' rendering of Psalm 100 was quite clever and the KJB information was really interesting---if brief. Though I feel like I wasted a lot of time forcing myself to read this book, it has served to spark an interest in James I and the translating of the KJB, so I suppose all's not lost.

Released 6 yrs ago (10/23/2017 UTC) at A Bookcrosser in A BookCrosser, A Bookcrossing member -- Controlled Releases

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Journal Entry 4 by thegoaliegirl at Vancouver, Washington USA on Thursday, October 26, 2017
This book has arrived safely. Looks interesting. I don't know a lot about King James. Thanks so much!

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