The 9 March 2015 newsletter for the Review of Biblical Literature noted reviews of:
- Olivier Artus, Loi et Justice dans la Littérature du Proche-Orient ancien, reviewed by Michael S. Moore
- Gary M. Beckman, Trevor R. Bryce, and Eric H. Cline, The Ahhiyawa Texts, reviewed by Aren M. Maeir
- Keith Bodner, Elisha’s Profile in the Book of Kings: The Double Agent, reviewed by Gerhard Karner
- Walter Brueggemann, Reality, Grief, Hope: Three Urgent Prophetic Tasks, reviewed by LeAnn Snow Flesher
- Katharine J. Dell, Interpreting Ecclesiastes: Readers Old and New, reviewed by Mark Sneed
- Robert Geis, Exegesis and the Synoptics, reviewed by Jeffrey Paul García
- Wilfred J. Harrington, Reading Mark for the First Time, reviewed by Jeff Jay
- Thomas R. Hatina, New Testament Theology and its Quest for Relevance: Ancient Texts and Modern Readers, reviewed by Gary M. Burge
- John Huehnergard, An Introduction to Ugaritic, reviewed by Philip C. Schmitz
- Hans Leander, Discourses of Empire: The Gospel of Mark from a Postcolonial Perspective, reviewed by Angela N. Parker
- M. David Litwa, Iesus Deus: The Early Christian Depiction of Jesus as a Mediterranean God, reviewed by Joseph Verheyden
- Siobhan Dowling Long, The Sacrifice of Isaac: The Reception of a Biblical Story in Music, reviewed by Deborah W. Rooke
- Scot McKnight and Joseph B. Modica, eds., Jesus Is Lord, Caesar Is Not: Evaluating Empire in New Testament Studies, reviewed by Russell Morton
- Sarah J. K. Pearce, The Words of Moses: Studies in the Reception of Deuteronomy in the Second Temple Period, reviewed by Sven Petry
- Kenneth C. Way, Donkeys in the Biblical World: Ceremony and Symbol, reviewed by Brent Strawn
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