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NASB Aquila Wide Margin Reference Bible, Black Goatskin Leather Edge-lined, Red-letter Text, NS746:XRME

  • Based on 187 reviews
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Description

A Cambridge special edition of the renowned New American Standard Bible, with wide margins and extra study features in a fine goatskin leather binding, edge-lined for extra suppleness. The NASB Wide-Margin Reference Edition is based upon Cambridge's NASB Pitt Minion Edition. The layout and pagination of the Old and New Testaments is identical but here the Bible text is enlarged and offers the additional benefit of wide margins for note-making. The Bible is printed on slightly thicker paper for enhanced durability, and (like all Cambridge Bibles) is sewn for increased longevity and also to enable the Bible to open and stay flat. This edition features red-letter text for the words of Christ, full cross-references, an extensive concordance, extra ruled pages for notes and 15 maps. Bound in supple black goatskin (real Morocco) leather, it has two ribbon markers, a presentation page and art-gilt (red-under-gold) page edges. Read more


Publisher ‏ : ‎ Cambridge Bibles (June 21, 2007)


Language ‏ : ‎ English


Leather Bound ‏ : ‎ 1188 pages


ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0521702658


ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 52


Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.98 pounds


Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 8.27 x 1.77 x 10.04 inches


Best Sellers Rank: #746,558 in Books (See Top 100 in Books) #7,031 in Christian Bibles (Books) #11,314 in Christian Bible Study (Books)


#7,031 in Christian Bibles (Books):


#11,314 in Christian Bible Study (Books):


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If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Sunday, Dec 29

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • It's a keeper!
This NASB Pitt Minion is my fourth Cambridge Bible. (I have other styles in other versions.) I really like this one. It's quite compact, pleasantly thin. The type is small but of high quality. The cover is supple out of the box. The brown is rather pleasant, rather dark much like semi-sweet chocolate. For a small Bible it packs a lot of features: Concordance, maps, cross references, footnotes, and about 4 blank pages in the front and about 7 blank pages in the back. All in all, it's a nice package. A little expensive, due to the goatskin, but it feels great in your hand. In short, this may end up being my all around favorite Bible. NASB is my favorite translation for study. The NASB is generally recognized as the most literal version available today. It is also quite accurate. The NIV is somewhat easier to read, but is closer to being a dynamic translation rather than a literal translation. Both have their place. The NIV shines as a daily reader, the NASB as a study Bible. Some claimed that the 1977 version NASB was wooden and that it was hard to read aloud. This is the 1995 update, so those problems have been softened a bit. I also have a Cambridge wide margin NASB in goatskin. It's rather large though, so it stays home. This Pitt Minion is just the right size for a travel Bible, which is what I purchased it for. I only have two minor quibbles with this Bible. The first is that the red letter print varies in darkness in some places. This seems to be a common problem with some Bibles. I have several Thompson Chain Bibles that have that same characteristic. In this case though, it's just enough to notice. It looks even on any one page. I just noticed that the red ink on some pages is darker than that on other pages. The black text is quite uniform. My second quibble is that the concordance is really scaled back. I'd like to see them add a few more pages and include more words and references. I'm sure that like anything else, they had to make some compromises to keep the size of the Pitt Minion modest. You may be wondering, what makes a Cambridge Bible worth the premium price? Two things. The workmanship is unmatched in mass production Bibles. Wherever you open this Bible, the pages lay flat from Genesis to Revelation. The leather feels very comfortable from its first day of use. High quality paper is used. Most importantly, if the Bible fails from normal use due to defect Cambridge will replace it. I've had this happen. I called them up, they sent a pre-paid shipping label and paid the freight for me to return my defective Bible and they sent a new one out to me free. That's important because I use my Bibles every day. With daily use, lesser Bibles only hold up for a year or two. I suspect that both this and my wide margin NASB will last for 20 or more years of daily use. When you look at the service you'll get out of them, the Cambridge is worth every penny. Update: Have had this bible for around two years now. It's the one I take to the office with me since the size is perfect for a book bag. This may be my all around favorite bible. It's holding up very well despite daily use. I've also noticed that Amazon's reviews have seemed to mix the Brown Goatskin NASB Pitt Minion up with the Goatskin Wide Margin NASB. Keep that in mind while reading the reviews. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 25, 2010 by William Steck

  • This is by far the most beautiful Bible I have ever owned
I have purchased this Bible twice; the first one I gave away as a gift. This is by far the most beautiful Bible I have ever owned. It catches people's attention. It is the finest book I have ever held. The pages are top quality, and I do not doubt it will last a lifetime. There are still a couple minor points of improvement that could be made. First, the print is fairly small, and I expect to keep getting older, so there is concern that I will still be able to use it when I am very old. Interestingly, the print is exceptionally easy to read. So, I have put the font to the test reading in low light without my glasses (which hopefully represents the most blindness I will experience in life) and I can still read the print reasonably well. In normal lighting, even the footnotes and cross-references are very readable. The quality of the print is excellent to the degree that the size of the font may never matter. It is easy to read, but part of me still wishes it was a bit larger. Second, it is a double-column format which I do not prefer. I might be able to accept this better if the margins were equally wide. It has been noted that the inner margin is not as wide as the outer margin, and I do not intend on making fewer notes on the inner-margin verses. There is also a wide margin at the bottom of the page, which I tend to use for the inner-margin columns to make up for the space. You can create your own index of notes, and there are lined pages in the rear. All of this permits a high degree of flexibility for creating your own study Bible. There is a hardback version of this also, which runs about $50. I am using that as an opportunity to play around with the layout for notes, and planning to transfer to the goatskin Bible down the road. It may be worth noting that the NASB is scheduled to release an update in 2017, and hopefully the update will be released by Cambridge in a wide-margin format similar to this one....and who knows, maybe with a wider inner margin and a tad bit larger font. I do not necessarily expect a single column format since part of the purpose of this Bible is to preserve the Pitt Minion pagination. If you love the NASB, you will be very pleased to own this, with the only possible areas of concern being font size and that inner margin. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 25, 2016 by ODT

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