I don't think any of his books are in Logos. He's a Jewish professor of Hebrew Bible at Harvard, with some really good stuff.
If I had to prioritize, Creation and the Persistence of Evil would be my preference. Lots of links to other things.
He's got some other books reprinting essays from elsewhere. This was one from First Things about historical criticism, which he criticizes a bit. - http://www.firstthings.com/article/1993/02/003-the-bible-unexamined-commitments-of-criticism
Ten years ago I had an experience that made me vividly aware of the two worlds with which the practitioner of the critical study of the Bible inevitably deals. Reading applications for the doctoral program whose faculty I had only recently joined, I was struck by the frequency on the autobiographical statements of a pattern that a form critic might call the “conversion narrative.” Sometimes this narrative assumed a doubled form, first the conversion into a robust but uncritical Christian faith and then, usually in college or seminary, a second conversion marked by acceptance of the historical-critical method and an abandonment of doctrines of inerrancy and the like, though never of Christianity itself. At other times candidates narrated only a conversion of the first sort or otherwise gave an account of their lives that showed no awareness of the nature of the historical criticism of the Bible, the only approach that our doctoral program utilized. Worried about the suitability of such applicants for the program, I broached the issue to a senior colleague, who immediately sought to allay my anxieties. “Don’t worry,” he said. “A lot of our students start out like that, but they change after they have been here two weeks.”