You can read online the articles in Volume 33 (2019) by clicking on the links below. There, you will also see more formats that are available for each individual article, including paperback and e-book. The complete volume will be available from the following sources:
The Interpreter Foundation: Free downloads in three formats: PDF, EPUB and MOBI.
Amazon: Printed paperback edition at Amazon or AmazonSmile and direct Kindle download at Amazon or AmazonSmile.
Barnes & Noble: ePub format at www.barnesandnoble.com.
Apple: ePub format at iBooks.
Google: ePub format at Google Play.
- Daniel C. Peterson
Recent Reflections While Partaking of the Sacrament, vii-xiv - Matthew L. Bowen
Shazer: An Etymological Proposal in Narrative Context, 1-12 - Jeff Lindsay
A Precious Resource with Some Gaps, 13-104 - Brad Wilcox, Bruce L. Brown, Wendy Baker-Smemoe, Sharon Black, and Dennis L. Eggett
Comparing Phonemic Patterns in Book of Mormon Personal Names with Fictional and Authentic Sources: An Exploratory Study, 105-122 - Duane Boyce
Text as Afterthought: Jana Riess’s Treatment of the Jacob-Sherem Episode, 123-140 - Nathan B. Oman
Welding Another Link in Wonder’s Chain: The Task of Latter-day Saint Intellectuals in the Church’s Third Century, 141-160 - Duane Boyce
Jacob Did Not Make a False Prediction, 161-174 - John Gee
The Joseph Smith Papers Project Stumbles, 175-184 - Noel B. Reynolds
The Language of the Spirit in the Book of Mormon, 187-222 - Stan Spencer
What Did the Interpreters (Urim and Thummim) Look Like?, 223-256 - Amanda Colleen Brown
Never Static, Never Simple: One Woman’s Conversations Within the Marginalia of If Truth Were a Child, 257-266 - John Hilton III, Ryan Sharp, Brad Wilcox, and Jaron Hansen
Gentiles in the Book of Mormon, 267-288 - Richley Crapo
Lehi, Joseph, and the Kingdom of Israel, 289-304 - Jeffrey M. Bradshaw and Ryan Dahle
Could Joseph Smith Have Drawn on Ancient Manuscripts When He Translated the Story of Enoch?: Recent Updates on a Persistent Question, 305-374