I would love to see their respective OT theologies in a Logos format
Ja wohl! When I was the graduate assistant to my mentor in OT form criticism (who had been a student of Von Rad at Heidelberg), I had to lead a group of his seminary students in discussion of Von Rad. I would hightly recomment it. Eichrodt too, but especially Von Rad. I would also recommend Hermann Gunkel's Schopfung und Chaos in Urzeit und Endzeit which is recently translated as Creation and Chaos in the :Primieval Era and the Eschaton (Eerdman's).
I would also be interested in these resources.
Both a little dated now, but there's not much better that has come since, so a +1 from me. Anything that frees up my shelf space...
Both a little dated now
Whilst true, one still also needs to "dialogue" with them....
+1 from me...
I would support these books.
I agree and would like to see both as well!
I'd certainly be interested in these.
[Y]
Yes!
Eichrodt's Theology of the OT was part of the "old" Old Testament Library (along with "A History of Israel" by John Bright and first-class commentaries e.g. by von Rad and Martin Noth).
I bought my (German Language) paper version after I've read about it in John Brights "The Authority of the Old Testament" - another book sorely missing in Logos.