It would be good to get this in Logos:
David Bentley Hart’s text recaptures the awkward, multivoiced power of the original.
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/01/the-new-testament-a-translation-david-bentley-hart/546551/
Particularly interesting for Logos because of this (excerpt from the article):
In the beginning was the Word, says the Gospel according to John—a lovely statement of the case, as it’s always seemed to me. A pre-temporal syllable swelling to utterance in the mouth of the universe, spoken once and heard forever: God’s power chord, if you like. For David Bentley Hart, however, whose mind-bending translation of the New Testament was published in October, the Word—as a word—does not suffice: He finds it to be “a curiously bland and impenetrable designation” for the heady concept expressed in the original Greek of the Gospels as Logos. The Chinese word Tao might get at it, Hart tells us, but English has nothing with quite the metaphysical flavor of Logos, the particular sense of a formative moral energy diffusing itself, without diminution, through space and time. So he throws up his hands and leaves it where it is: “In the origin there was the Logos …”
by David Bentley Hart
Yale University Press (2017)
ISBN: 978-0300186093
https://www.amazon.com/New-Testament-David-Bentley-Hart/dp/0300186096
I see that someone has already created a UserVoice suggestion for it. I've just added my 3 votes:
https://suggestbooks.uservoice.com/forums/308269-book-suggestions/suggestions/32975371-the-new-testament-a-translation-by-david-bentley