Regarded as sacred scripture by millions, the Book of Mormon
-- first published in 1830 -- is one of the most significant documents
in American religious history. This new reader-friendly version
reformats the complete, unchanged 1920 text in the manner of modern
translations of the Bible, with paragraphs, quotations marks, poetic
forms, topical headings, multichapter headings, indention of quoted
documents, italicized reworkings of biblical prophecies, and minimized
verse numbers. It also features a hypothetical map based on internal
references, an essay on Book of Mormon poetry, a full glossary of names,
genealogical charts, a basic bibliography of Mormon and non-Mormon
scholarship, a chronology of the translation, eyewitness accounts of the
gold plates, and information regarding the lost 116 pages and
significant changes in the text.
The Book of Mormon
claims to be the product of three historical interactions: the writings
of the original ancient American authors, the editing of the
fourth-century prophet Mormon, and the translation of Joseph Smith. The
editorial aids and footnotes in this edition integrate all three
perspectives and provide readers with a clear guide through this
complicated text. New readers will find the story accessible and
intelligible; Mormons will gain fresh insights from familiar verses seen
in a broader narrative context. This is the first time the Book of Mormon
has been published with quotation marks, select variant readings, and
the testimonies of women involved in the translation process. It is also
the first return to a paragraphed format since versification was added
in 1879.