BorderStone Press

BorderStone Press was a limited liability publishing company located in the United States[2][3] that published works of historical fiction, children's literature, history, science, current issues and religion. It operates now as BSP Productions but due to several factors is no longer in a position to publish books.[4]

BorderStone Press, LLC
limited liability company
Industrybook publishing, media, research
Founded2009
Key people
Brian Mooney, Roger Duke, Bradley Mooney, Elizabeth Wood[1]
ProductsBooks
SubsidiariesThesis Imprints
Website

Company

Name

The company name is derived from the ancient prohibition against moving boundary markers, and its continuing mission is to seek truth in all things. See Proverbs 22:8, 23:10; Deuteronomy 27:17; 19:14."[5]

Research Initiatives

Water System at Tel Gezer

In the Spring of 2011, BSP launched its "Research Israel" Project, a research initiative undertaken with New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary. The first part of this project will be the documentation of NOBTS's Tel Gezer expedition in the June, 2011. BSP and NOBTS will work closely with the Israeli Nature and Parks Authority as well as the Israeli Antiquities Authority to explore an early Canaanite water shaft that first excavated by R.A. McAlister. BSP will publish the findings of this expedition in a volume due in the winter 2011/2012.

gollark: We're going all Lua here, for purposes.
gollark: Fiiiine, we can reexist forms, but they're subject to cross-origin requirements and they send Lua table notation instead of (ew) x-www-form-urlencoded.
gollark: You could have a "please screen-read it as this" attribute, but then nobody will actually set it, as happens now.
gollark: Like I said, if you just break out all the various web bits into separate protocols, you then have to deal with irritating things like enforcing the same security on each, actually tying them together into one system to do what you want (because you quite plausibly want the file upload/download bits to be part of the same service), lots of open ports and possibly different server software, and implementing similar protocols over and over again.
gollark: No. They use multipart.

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-07-08. Retrieved 2011-05-13.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. Reformed Reader
  3. Christian Book Notes
  4. https://www.bspproductions.com/blog
  5. Reformed Reader
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