"In this compelling and significant contribution, Garrick Allen provides an accessible guide to the fascinating materials that survive in New Testament manuscripts but that are systematically left out of modern critical editions. Allen's three-dimensional approach to the texts of the New Testament reconnects the texts with the world of the manuscripts. Get acquainted with the gems hiding in the critical apparatus, learn about the features that frame the text, and catch glimpses of the lives of readers who pondered the New Testament before you. Your reading of the New Testament will never be the same again."
--Liv Ingeborg Lied, Norwegian School of Theology "This book is a game changer! As exegetes we are mainly interested in what we call the New Testament text(s). But a Bible is so much more--material, binding, titles, introductions, images, and marginalia--and all this influences our reading and understanding. It is time to change the field of biblical studies. Garrick Allen's fascinating and very readable book opens the door."
--Tobias Nicklas, University of Regensburg
"The increased attention given in recent decades to the documents that convey the text of the New Testament is most welcome. In this book, one of the leaders in this area of research makes clear the significance of paratextual features of manuscripts for a better understanding of the history of both text and canon of the New Testament."
--Michael Holmes, Bethel University
"In an age of abundant digital texts, we need to go back to the manuscripts, their materiality and aesthetics, and their surprising features to get a realistic sense of the time in which biblical texts were created and first transmitted. Based on several major research projects, Garrick Allen presents fascinating insights into the changing design of biblical manuscripts, their layout and paratexts, titles, prefaces, prologues, cross-references. The book is well written and entertaining, and may change the way readers see the Bible."
--J?rg Frey, University of Zurich
"In Words Are Not Enough, Garrick Allen brings the thrilling results of manuscript studies to a broad audience of students and scholars. As he shows, the New Testament is a material object that human communities continuously make and remake. With clarity and grace, he teaches readers what attending to manuscripts and their paratexts can offer while also showing, step by step, how to go about this work. This book performs a valuable service that will benefit anyone interested in the New Testament, early Christian history, and the history of the book. Highly recommended."
--Jennifer Wright Knust, Duke University
"Brimming with knowledge, this invaluable introduction will intrigue, surprise, and--most importantly--educate anyone who wants to understand the manuscripts and physical reality of the New Testament."
--Candida Moss, University of Birmingham, UK
"The Bible is often imagined as a kind of monument, a fixed point in an ever-changing world. In his new book, Garrick Allen argues persuasively that this model overlooks the Bible's materiality: the Bible is always more than the sum of its texts, and--precisely because it is valued so highly--it changes constantly as its formatting and packaging changes."
--Francis Watson, Durham University
"This important and engaging book draws our attention to everything that is usually left unscrutinized on the pages of a Bible or manuscript. Allen shows us, through his sensitive analysis, how paratexts shape biblical interpretation in profound and unexpected ways."
--Yii-Jan Lin, Yale Divinity School
"This book demonstrates with admirable clarity the multiple ways in which material philology can shed light on the transmission and reception of the New Testament. Focusing on the frames and margins of the biblical texts, Allen shows how people in various ways have engaged with the New Testament and its manuscripts, and why it is not enough to simply study the words of the biblical texts by themselves to understand its historical significance and impact."
--Hugo Lundhaug, University of Oslo