Best Short Story Literary Criticism
Here is Ernest Hemingway’s first published story and a classic by William Faulkner, who admitted in his biographical note that he began to write “as an aid to love-making.” Nancy Hale’s story describes far-reaching echoes of the Holocaust; Tillie Olsen’s story expresses the desperation of a single mother; James Baldwin depicts the bonds of brotherhood and music. Moore writes that the process of assembling these stories allowed her to look “thrillingly not just at literary history but at actual history — the cries and chatterings, silences and descriptions of a nation in flux.” 100 Years of The Best American Short Stories is an invaluable testament, a retrospective of our country’s ever-changing but continually compelling literary artistry. For the centennial celebration of this beloved annual series, master of the form Lorrie Moore selects forty stories from the more than two thousand that were published in previous editions. Moore writes that the process of assembling these stories allowed her to look thrillingly not just at literary history but at actual history the cries and chatterings, silences and descriptions of a nation in flux.
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"On the whole, the stories selected for this collection are good, some are superb, and others left me shaking my head in puzzlement as to why they were included. It's easy to pull things apart but, for this review, I will focus on those stories I loved, some of which I may have read previously and others that are new to me but I will never forget. The collection is arranged chronologically and there is a short description of each time period with a focus on the types of stories that were prominent during that era. Written in the aftermath of World War II, the concept of shared terror is explored, along with the power of strength and connection. What touched me most in this story is its examination of the connections made without words - some through music, some through the collective unconscious, and some through inner promises we make to ourselves. As a clinical social worker, I have not read anything that comes close to examining the inner world of a child/woman trying to make sense of an irrational life. The child spends her life wondering what her mother might have been like, what is the true essence of her father, and what comprises her own sense of self."
"While exceptional, it is just a smidge less exceptional that The Best American Short Stories of the 20th Century."
"Large, heavy volume of fantastic stories."
"Exceptional collection."
"Great collection of the classics and the new."
"A good collection to keep close at hand for whenever you have an hour for a really good story."
"Great Book for my college student!!!"
"Wonderful reading from start to finish."
She has published more than sixty books ranging from fiction to nonfiction, children’s books to poetry, and has received many lifetime achievement awards including the Library of Congress Living Legends award. This year her publications include three survey collections: The Found and the Lost: The Collected Novellas; The Unreal and the Real: The Selected Short Stories; and The Complete Orsinia: Malafrena, Stories and Songs (Library of America). "The collection articulates Le Guin’s belief in the social and political value of storytelling, as well as her fear that corporatization has made the publishing landscape increasingly inhospitable to risk-takers, to those who insist on other ways. In 'Making Up Stories,' Le Guin implores her audience not to ask where she gets her ideas: 'I have managed to keep the address of the company where I buy my ideas a secret all these years, and I’m not about to let people in on it now.'. "Le Guin ( The Real and the Unreal ), an honored and prodigious fiction writer, will delight her many fans with these 67 selections of her recent nonfiction. The wide-ranging collection includes essays, lectures, introductions, and reviews, all informed by Le Guin’s erudition, offered without academic mystification, and written (or spoken) with an inviting grace. Herself a genre-defying writer most associated with science fiction and fantasy, Le Guin frequently challenges the restrictiveness of genre-based value judgments that relegate science fiction to a literary ghetto.” Le Guin’s book speaks both to readers, in the succinct and lucid reviews and introductions, and to writers, as in Making Up Stories,” in which she urges writers to be readers, and The Hope of Rabbits,” her journal of a week at a writers’ retreat. Le Guin’s nominal topic is often a book, but her subjects are more complex, reaching deeply into the nexus of politics and language, women’s issues, the effects of technology, and books as commerce. "It would be churlish to deny the benefits of this thoughtful, concise volume...In essence, Le Guin reveals the art of craft and the craft of art...this book is a star by which to set one's course." "The collection articulates Le Guin’s belief in the social and political value of storytelling, as well as her fear that corporatization has made the publishing landscape increasingly inhospitable to risk-takers, to those who insist on other ways. In 'Making Up Stories,' Le Guin implores her audience not to ask where she gets her ideas: 'I have managed to keep the address of the company where I buy my ideas a secret all these years, and I’m not about to let people in on it now.'. "Le Guin ( The Real and the Unreal ), an honored and prodigious fiction writer, will delight her many fans with these 67 selections of her recent nonfiction. The wide-ranging collection includes essays, lectures, introductions, and reviews, all informed by Le Guin’s erudition, offered without academic mystification, and written (or spoken) with an inviting grace. Herself a genre-defying writer most associated with science fiction and fantasy, Le Guin frequently challenges the restrictiveness of genre-based value judgments that relegate science fiction to a “literary ghetto.” Le Guin’s book speaks both to readers, in the succinct and lucid reviews and introductions, and to writers, as in “Making Up Stories,” in which she urges writers to be readers, and “The Hope of Rabbits,” her journal of a week at a writers’ retreat. Le Guin’s nominal topic is often a book, but her subjects are more complex, reaching deeply into the nexus of politics and language, women’s issues, the effects of technology, and books as commerce. “All novels belong to it.” One excellent piece, not previously published, rails against “the masculine orientation of discussion of books and authors in the press.” In a review of Kent Haruf’s Benediction, Le Guin remarks on a character’s “humor so dry it’s almost ether.” That praise applies to Le Guin as well in a collection notable for its wit, unvarnished opinions, and passion." "It would be churlish to deny the benefits of this thoughtful, concise volume...In essence, Le Guin reveals the art of craft and the craft of art...this book is a star by which to set one's course."
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"Le Guin's nonfiction has been special to me since the essay "From Elfland to Poughkeepsie," which was read aloud to raucous laughter at a Mythopoeic meeting, and pre-destroyed that month's fated, or rather _doomed_, book. The first almost-third consists of "Talks, Essays, and Occasional Pieces," on topics ranging from a (most gracious) response to essays on one of her books to her young life in a house designed by Bernard Maybeck, from the disappearing of women writers to animals in fiction, and culminating quite satisfactorily with the now-somewhat-famous short speech Le Guin gave in accepting the National Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters, itself a huge contribution to American letters. Here she writes generously of Dick and MacDonald, Wells and the Strugatsky brothers, and several others, including Boris Pasternak and Western writer H.L. This was the part of the book I anticipated most and enjoyed least, probably because most of them are very short, three to four pages, and just tease my attention before they're over. It is very rooted, says almost nothing about her process as a writer, and ties the book together into a whole in a way that I cannot explain, for I do not understand it, but it does."
"there's is great wisdom, lots of laughs and years of experience in this book."
"Speeches and reviews of an outstanding author."
"Le Guin is a fine writer and this is another example of her artistry."
"I know it's going to be good because I've been reading Le Guin for over 50 years, but I honestly haven't had time to read the book."
It is regarded as an important early work of American feminist literature, illustrating attitudes in the 19th century toward women's health, both physical and mental. Her supportive, though misunderstanding husband, John, believes it is in her best interests to go on a rest cure after the birth of their child.
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"It manages to be eerier than much of Poe without ratcheting up the Gothic tendencies of similar stories of psychological decline."
"In "The Yellow Wallpaper", Charlotte Perkins Gilman explores the rest cure through a story in which her unreliable narrator slowly unravels like the wallpaper on which she fixates."
"I suggest seeing the movie and reading the story to reach a possible scenario to conclude this imaginative tale."
"It’s sad what so many women had to endure and I’m very grateful for early feminists such as Charlotte Perkins Gilman who dared to voice her opinions in a public way."
"This short story is 29 pages that is written in journal form yet there are no dates."
"Excellent story and glad I was able to pick it up because if I had not been in class I would not have ever picked up this story."
"Wallpaper is a very short story written from the perspective of a woman's personal diary from which we get to see her true feelings about her situation, feeling she has to hide from her physician husband who believes her to be suffering from a "temporary nervous depression--a slight hysterical tendency.""
"The various descriptions of this short story failed to do justice to the tale and the main character."
Best Canadian Literary Criticism
Editors Margaret Anne Doody, Mary Doody Jones, and Wendy Barry provide a richly illustrated, completely revised text, along with hundreds of notes describing the real-life characters and settings Anne encounters, the autobiographical connections between Anne and Maud Montgomery, and the book's astonishing range of literary, biblical, and mythological references. Margaret Anne Doody supplies a comprehensive introduction, which situates the novel in its literary and social contexts, explores those aspects of Montgomery's life most relevant to the story, examines revisions in the manuscripts, and provides an overall sense of both the impulses that drove Montgomery to write Anne of Green. Gables and the larger concerns it dramatizes so compellingly. Also included are scholarly essays on the history of the Celtic settlers on Prince Edward Island, orphanages and children, education, gardens and plants, home life, food preparation and cookery (including contemporary recipes), music and elocution, and literary allusion and quotations in Anne of Green Gables.
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"It is a marvelous book with a main character I wish I could meet every day in real life. Reading them all in nearly a continous setting makes Anne "wearying" to quote Marilla since unbounded child-like wonder is hard to maintain."
"Wonderful books, if you haven't read them or you have and its been a while I highly suggest buying them again!"
"Together with three girlfriends, including the wealthy, charming and contrary "Phil" Gordon, Anne will rent the perfect little cottage on the edge of campus that becomes their perfect home base for studies and an exciting new social life of dances, dinners and football games. Her journey of discovery will take her to a very dark place, before the dawn of new hope..."
"I will be going through part of it next year, using the Rilla of Ingleside part of the collection to help understand World War 1. (About 10% of the Canadian Military were killed and approximately 10% injured according to figures from Wikipedia and the Canadian government website concerning the Canadian Expeditionary Force. )."
"It's as if someone typed it into a document, and printed it off--no page numbers, not titled at the top of each page, the lines don't even break properly (see photo)."
"When I got to chapter 6, I decided to compare a sentence in the digital print to my old, yellowing physical copy of Anne of Green Gables book. I realized why I had some difficulty reading my new digital copy: THERE ARE TYPOS IN THIS PRODUCT. I am able to follow the story because I've read Anne of Green Gables more than once with my hard copy but for new readers, these typos will make this beautiful story difficult to read and at times, understand."
"The illustrations are actually random pictures that are creepy since they are in the beginning when Anne meets Mathew Cuthbert so they insinuate a romance between them."
Best Poetry Literary Criticism
A Little Book on Form takes up the central contradiction between poetry as genre and the poetics of the imagination. A Little Book on Form brilliantly synthesizes Hass’s formidable gifts as both a poet and a critic. It began as a series of notes and reading lists for a seminar I was invited to teach at the University of Iowa Writers Workshop in the winter of 1995. . For the second half of the class, I asked each student to make a presentation on an idea of form in some discipline or craft other than poetry. There were talks on the formal ordering of 1970s disco albums, form in the photographs of Cartier-Bresson, the building of a wooden canoe, and of a computer program, the plots of films noir, and the architectural design of mosques.
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"So excited to read this book."
"There probably aren’t enough open questions in Hass’s book, but God knows there are abundant quotations of poetry drawn from Hass’s broad knowledge of world poetry."
"He starts with the basics of form, 1, 2, 3, and 4-line poetry, or stanzas. He devotes long chapters to popular forms in English poetry, sonnet, ode, and elegy."
"Hass goes on to explore several forms and genres, including overviews and a more extensive examination of the sonnet form and its development since the 13th century, and a short section on the villanelle and sestina as forms adopted by Victorian poets from medieval French and Provencal poetry, He then presents several very interesting sections on development of genre poetry including the ode and the elegy and how the changing modes of thought during the development of these genres are reflected in their underlying structures."
"So that – trinity, for example – mystery begins here.”. Scattered throughout this freshly conceived book on poetry forms, little notes let us in on the poet’s actual thoughts in real time as though we’re passionately engaged in a lively discussion about a topic we all love."
Best Humor Literary Criticism
Praised throughout the cartoon industry by such luminaries as Art Spiegelman, Matt Groening, and Will Eisner, Scott McCloud's Understanding Comics is a seminal examination of comics art: its rich history, surprising technical components, and major cultural significance. “If you read, write, teach or draw comics; if you want to; or if you simply want to watch a master explainer at work, you must read this book.” (Neil Gaiman). “Cleverly disguised as an easy-to-read comic book, Scott McCloud’s simple-looking tome deconstructs the secret language of comics while casually revealing secrets of time, space, art and the cosmos!
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"McCloud has amazing insight into art and how to create interesting stories as well as communicate through drawing."
"Helpful for not just understanding comics, but also the concepts of semiotics."
"This is quintessential reading for anyone looking to get into the medium."
"Excellent book selection for learning the history of comics!"
"I was amazed at all the things I learned, starting with a definition of comics, a brief history of comics (they are really old!"
"This book is an incredible read for anyone interested in comic books."
"Scott McCloud effectively informs the reader of the logistics of comic books through a comic book-textbook hybrid."
"I consider this book as important as Richard William's Animator's Survival Kit and The Illusion Of Life by Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnson."
Best Drama Literary Criticism
It often begins in childhood in a darkened theater, grows into something more serious for high school actors, and reaches its passionate zenith when it comes time for love, marriage, and children, who will start the cycle all over again. The Secret Life of the American Musical makes you feel as though you’ve been there in the rehearsal room, in the front row of the theater, and in the working offices of theater owners and producers as they pursue their own love affair with that rare and elusive beast―the Broadway hit. Viertel combines a scholarly approach with a light touch that enables us to see anew familiar songs and musical theater moments we'd long taken for granted." "Viertel’s knowledgeable, engaging blueprint of [the] Broadway musical framework is instructive fun for cognoscenti and general readers alike." The Secret Life of the American Musical: How Broadway Shows Are Built is a delightful, accessible guide to why your favorite productions work. "Viertel articulates his rules of commercial success so lucidly that even seasoned hands will come away with a clearer understanding of why some shows work while others flop." "Viertel has written what will become a classic textbook on the architecture and construction of the American musical . What Harold Bloom did for Shakespearean exegesis and Peter Drucker for management, Viertel has done for theater: written a definitive work by raising the curtain and laying bare the work of playwrights, composers, librettists, choreographers, and directors." “Jack Viertel writes about the master craftsmen of the American musical, past and present, and reveals his own mastery on every page―his knowledge of the Broadway musical and of the intricate formula in the making of a show (or the breaking of it), and his passion for Broadway and the citizens who make the street come alive. “In The Secret Life of the American Musical , Jack Viertel, a Broadway producer and dramaturgical swami, has broken down Broadway’s greatest musicals into their constituent storytelling parts (a sort of anatomy of joy) and delivered a showstopper: one of the best-written, most illuminating, and most infectiously entertaining books on the genre I know. ‘It’s boffo!’ as they say on the Rialto.” ―John Lahr, author of Tennessee Williams: Mad Pilgrimage of the Flesh. By simultaneously (and brilliantly) embracing and deconstructing a beloved American art form, he brings us back to our most innocent selves, and all we can do is be grateful to him for reminding us of who we used to be.” ―Scott Rudin.
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"Jack Viertel's new book, "The Secret Life of the American Musical" is a stunningly informative book about the structure and success (or lack thereof) of modern day musicals. I must admit that my own experience of musicals is much more confined to those of the fifties, sixties and seventies, so when Viertel launches into musicals beginning thirty years ago to the present...well, those were quicker reads for me."
"Excellent book, a really nice companion piece to Razzle Dazzle: The Battle for Broadway that I finished last week."
"The author has a deep familiarity with musicals and provides excellent information along with his unique viewpoint."
"This is a great read for anyone who wants to open the machine and see how the gears fit together inside--enriched (to mix metaphors) by great Broadway stories and vivid portraits of Broadway personalities."
"Brilliant analysis of the musical."
"Highly advised to anyone considering writing musicals but also fun for just theater fans."
"Excellent look into the nuts-and-bolts of how musicals are built and how the art form has evolved over the years."
"The nuts and bolts of the American Musical but also filled with great stories."
Best Children's Literary Criticism
A richly illustrated and expanded collector’s edition of Martin Gardner’s The Annotated Alice , including Through the Looking-Glass , to celebrate the 150th anniversary of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. This volume brings together Martin Gardner’s legendary original 1960 publication, The Annotated Alice ; his follow-ups, More Annotated Alice and the Definitive Edition ; his continuing explication through the Knight Letter magazine; and masterly additions and updates edited by Mark Burstein, president emeritus of the Lewis Carroll Society of North America. A rare, never-before-published portrait of Francis Jane Lutwidge, Lewis Carroll's mother Over 100 new or updated annotations, collected since the publication of Martin Gardner's Definitive Edition of The Annotated Alice in 1999 More than 100 new illustrations, in vibrant color, by Salvador Dalí, Beatrix Potter, Ralph Steadman, and 42 other artists and illustrators, in addition to the original artwork by Sir John Tenniel A preface by Mark Burstein, president emeritus of the Lewis Carroll Society of North America, and all of Gardner's introductions to other editions A filmography of every Alice-related film by Carroll scholar David Schaefer. His most famous works are Alice's Adventures in Wonderland; its sequel, Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There; and The Hunting of the Snark.
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"However, there are still some glaring mistakes, such as some formatting bugs in a few of the poems and spelling errors in places (such as at the start of Looking Glass, where some of the Ls are replaced with 1s - I guess a scanner did the 'writing here')."
"I loved fantasy and other-world stories, but this one seemed so random and topsy turvy, I couldn't fully engage with it."
"Alice's Adventures is a classic that never gets old."
"I was 10 or 11 the first time I read Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll."
"It will be fun to explore her world via this 150 Anniversary Annotated Deluxe edition."
"A classic children's book that never gets old."
"Playful poetry may be more amusing for adults."
"I really wanted to like this--the original illustrations are beautifully reproduced--but bizzarely, half the books are italicized in their entirety, making them pretty much unreadable."
Best Gothic & Romantic Literary Criticism
In her Introduction, Spacks considers Austen’s life and career, the continuing appeal of Pride and Prejudice , and its power as a stimulus for fantasy (Maureen Dowd, writing in The New York Times , can hold forth at length on Obama as a Darcy-figure, knowing full well her readers will “understand that she wished to suggest glamour and sexiness”). Reading Pride and Prejudice with Spacks as a guide illuminates the richness of Austen's historical context, as the annotations draw attention to important material that might initially be missed...This beautifully produced and informative guide to reading Austen's brilliant and beloved novel in its historical context will be a welcome addition to the library of anyone who has read, or plans to read, Pride and Prejudice more than once...Both specialists and fans will find it a great pleasure to read, learn from, and argue with Spacks's annotated edition of this classic novel. So interesting and comprehensive are Spacks's notes on Austen, she could conceivably even introduce the author to a few male readers who might otherwise have veered away from all the bonnets and ruffles...Spacks is fascinating on the topic of Austen, and especially on the author's deft use of dialogue and observation to layer dense levels of meaning into her stories, the notes do open up new vistas of enjoyment and understanding, especially for those approaching the goings-on at Longbourn for the first time...Spacks's notes can be invaluable...For history buffs and period fetishists, who must surely comprise some significant part of the audience for historical romance, this annotated Pride and Prejudice is a treasure trove...This edition should prove equally refreshing to even the most ardent of Miss Bennet's amateur readers. A treat for the legions of Jane Austen enthusiasts, Pride and Prejudice: The Annotated Edition is an oversized volume packed with period illustrations and notation, illuminating the text and the life of Austen. [A] handsomely produced annotated edition...Spacks' annotations are illuminating...The dozens of illustrations--a watercolor of Austen by her sister, for example, and images of late 18th-century drawing rooms--add a layer of visual delight and edification to the clarifying notes Spacks offers. Austen's most famous novel needs no introduction, but it does benefit from the hundreds of loving notes--historical references, vocab tips, and more--provided by Austen scholar Patricia Meyer Spacks.
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"I already own a few copies of Pride and Prejudice so I didn't need another but this was too cute to pass up."
"So sitting on the shelf, it just looks like a cheap paperback with a plain black spine."
"She writes in a sophisticated way, with a great setting and characters. Definitely a book everyone needs to read."
"Mr. Darcy was considered to be a very prideful and arrogant man by those who lived in Hertfordshire; which in fact he was shy and uncomfortable around strangers."
"I came to Pride and Prejudice relatively spoiler free, and although it did not engage my emotions like Sense and Sensibility did, and it started out slowly for me, I was soon enthralled by Austen's characters, their witty observations and the story of prejudiced Elizabeth Bennett and proud Mr. Darcy. Kate Reading was a pleasant reader with the ability to distinguish characters with slight variations of pitch and tone and a knack for playing up the novel's most sardonic moments."
"I have read Pride and Prejudice several times, and still love Elizabeth and Mr. Darcy!"
"Being one of the most loved novels of all time I rather expected more."
"This is a review solely of the kindle version free version that I downloaded and not the actual story of Pride and Prejudice. The reason for this is because I never finished this copy."
Best Mystery & Detective Literary Criticism
The Sherlock Holmes Book , the latest in DK's award-winning Big Ideas Simply Explained series, tackles the most "elementary" of subjects — the world of Sherlock Holmes, as told by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. "All in all, it's an absolute stunning resource for any Sherlock fan, and a perfect companion to offer any new reader of the original Doyle stories." "[A]n encyclopedic, illustrated exploration of the entire canon of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's tales of Sherlock and Dr.
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"The book is laid out to give an overview of Doyle himself and narratives on major characters - Sherlock, Watson, Moriarity, Lestrade. There are some good pieces on the influence that Doyle's writings and characters continue to have on his readers and other writers as well."
"I bought this for a student who loves Sherlock Holmes."
"If you're a Holmes fan you need this in your library."
"Gave this as a gift."
"Purchased for my wife."
"Great book for all fans of Sherlock."
Best Horror & Supernatural Literary Criticism
The Conspiracy against the Human Race is renowned horror writer Thomas Ligotti's first work of nonfiction. Should the human race voluntarily put an end to its existence? Do we even know what it means to be human?
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"A must-read for anyone struggling with thoughts of existantialism and/or a fan of horror."
"This book was almost painful to read, but surprisingly engaging and entertaining."
"Bill Hicks once said you never hear his point of view in the news."
"Much of what is explained here is very interesting and I would say I responded to it, agreed with it, or saw his point...but didn't buy in all the way."
"Any repulsion I experienced, any resitance, denial or refutation to what I read was instantly exposed as the very conspiracy I was being confronted with in reading this zen like arrow to the heart of my own convoluted quasi-existence. Human conscousness is a double dead ended cul de sac, a disater, a blunder of nature so horrifying that only it's demise is a valid decision for the most ruthlessly altruistic and reasonable."
"Post-existential philosophy by a so-called weird fiction writer."
"I felt that Ligotti made interesting points and a strong case, while going through all the possible arguments and counter-arguments for the most basic questions about the nature of consciousness, life and reality."
Best Nature Literature Criticism
In his passionate, luminous novels, David James Duncan has won the devotion of countless critics and readers, earning comparisons to Harper Lee, Tom Robbins, and J.D. Duncan claims that each person owns scores of river teeth and that they have the potential to guide, wound, and withstand time's erasure.
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"Duncan's writing, his story telling, is wonderful."
"Bought for a class, this book makes nonfiction writing interesting for those of us who would've never read the genre otherwise."
"A collection of poignant stories, intriguing and entertaining."
"So many wonderful word journeys within this volume of stories."
"I found the stories and essays relating to the authors experience and spiritual insights relating to nature to be very profound."
"That is the way these short stories that go from a person's youth to his mature years."
"great read when fishing is slow."
"Wonderful Pacific Northwest Writer who captures the culture and spirituality of the regions natural places."
Best Political Literature Criticism
Combining the best of Hitchens's polemical punch and intellectual elegance in a tightly woven and subtle argument, this book addresses not only why Orwell matters today, but how he will continue to matter in a future, uncertain world.Christopher Hitchens, one of the most incisive minds of our own age, meets Orwell on the page in this provocative encounter of wit, contention and moral truth. Christopher Hitchens is a contributing editor to Vanity Fair .
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"George Orwell has been labeled, recruited, insulted, folded, excluded, misunderstood, and watered down. The failure of government to see events in the proper light or sometimes to lie outright to protect itself and its goals. While I would also suggest NINTEEN EIGHTY-FOUR,signet classic ct311 (paperback) I would say that the novel has overshadowed some of the other great NONfictional works of his and I would, if I was you, try to expand on your knowledge of his ideas - as I am doing right now."
"Especially in a world where we are living with extra high levels of political correctness, we need to be reminded that George Orwell dealt with that issue."
"In defense of Orwell, Hitchens pulls out all his big reverberating guns of literary criticism and biographical detail. I highly recommend this book to anyone who wants to delve into the biography of the great writer, the political polemics of his thoughts, the arguments against and for the world of Orwell's inner mind. As for me, I consider this work to be a masterful cynical retributive reaction against all the many millions of words written on Orwell (more than he ever got to write in his lifetime.)."
"I can't say that, like Orwell's essays, this was a joy to read; but if there are really people so enslaved to current groupnonthink as to suspect GO of being invalidated by the thoughtcrimes against accusations of which Hitch here defends him capably, then it was worth writing and will be worth reading."
Best Science Fiction & Fantasy Literary Criticism
In this beautifully illustrated compendium of all things Outlandish, Gabaldon covers the first four novels of the main series, including: • full synopses of Outlander, Dragonfly in Amber, Voyager, and Drums of Autumn • a complete listing of the characters (fictional and historical) in the first four novels in the series, as well as family trees and genealogical notes. • a comprehensive glossary and pronunciation guide to Gaelic terms and usage. • The Gabaldon Theory of Time Travel, explained. • frequently asked questions to the author and her (sometimes surprising) answers. • an annotated bibliography. • essays about medicine and magic in the eighteenth century, researching historical fiction, creating characters, and more. • professionally cast horoscopes for Jamie and Claire. • the making of the TV series: how we got there from here, and what happened next (including “My Brief Career as a TV Actor”). • behind-the-scenes photos from the Outlander TV series set. For anyone who wants to spend more time with the Outlander characters and the world they inhabit, Diana Gabaldon here opens a door through the standing stones and offers a guided tour of what lies within. For nine years, four books, and nearly 4,000 pages, Diana Gabaldon has entranced readers with her talent for historical authenticity, dramatic plot lines, and strong characters in the Outlander series.
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"Perfect for when you want to jog your memory without having to read the whole book over."
"Love her books, every one, read them over and over again and still can't get enough of them."
"This book helps put all of the marvelous characters together in an easy to use edition."
"If you LOVE Diana Gabaldon's OUTLANDER books and TV series this is a MUST HAVE!!!"
"good show to Collection >> very comprehensive."
"review of story and how scenes were done- I am an Outlander fan - a great addition to my collection."
"Gabaldon explains all very well."
"DG's books are complicated and this is a great companion book to the incredible story she gifted us."
Best Womens Literature Criticism
From the author of Men Explain Things to Me , a personal, lyrical narrative about storytelling and empathy – a fitting companion to Solnit’s A Field Guide to Getting Lost A finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award In this exquisitely written new book by the author of A Paradise Built in Hell , Rebecca Solnit explores the ways we make our lives out of stories, and how we are connected by empathy, by narrative, by imagination. The catalyst for the latest spiraling inquiry by Lannan Literary Award–winning creative nonfiction master Solnit is her mother’s Alzheimer’s.
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"I'm a big fan of RS's essays and well aware she can write circles around most people."
"Not only is this on my list of "all-time favorite" books, I have bought this for 7(!!)."
"While this is a lyrical and unique book- half memoir, half literary/cultural criticism - I did not connect with much of the author's issues related to her mother, or former boyfriend, or friend in crisis, or her own disease."
"Rebecca Solnit doesn't disappoint."
"I did enjoy some of the threads more than others."
"Basically it is a memoir, but takes in a world of ideas and thankfully ties them together in the end."
"This book, for me, is a different side of the fabulous Rebecca Solnit, who is my go-to for so many things historical or related to social action."
"With a deft hand, Solnit weaves the doors and windows through which she travels into a mesmerizing story. She had decided early on to never refuse an adventure, and she shares a few she had taken as relief and growth as the burden of her mother grew. Somehow, the author successfully weaves the story of Frankenstein and the history of his creator into a meaningful, and even necessary, part of her own discourse. It challenges the reader to evaluate one's own internal script and to open for the constant change of every context."
Best Comic & Graphic Novel Literary Criticism
Formatted in an easy-to use A-to-Z layout, this guide is packed with information and thrilling comic book art and features more than 1,100 characters including Batman, Superman, Wonder Woman, The Joker, and much more. Matthew K. Manning has contributed to over 40 books and comic books, including DK's Batman™: A Visual History , DC Comics: A Visual History , and DC Comics: Year by Year .
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"My 12 year old son got this book at our local library and then kept renewing it over and over again because he liked it so much."
"So far so good."
"Awesome encyclopedia for newcomers to DC comics or fanatics like me!"
"This book is so awesome!"
"I had no idea the history and detail of the superhero world."
"My brother received a marvel encyclopedia for his bday so I gave him this for Christmas."
"I purchased this book for my son as a birthday present."
"This was a gift for my ex husband and he absolutely loves it."
Best Religious Literature Criticism
Happy 90th birthday (10/14/16), to one of the world's most beloved icons of literature, Winnie-the-Pooh! In which it is revealed that one of the world's great Taoist masters isn't Chinese--or a venerable philosopher--but is in fact none other than that effortlessly calm, still, reflective bear. Is there such thing as a Western Taoist?
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"Insightfully true to the original."
"Great book, simplifies philosophy in a humorous way."
"I first read this book at time of publication."
"gr8 book."
"It was a gift for son and absolutely loves it!"
Best Historical Event Literature Criticism
By Steppe, Desert, and Ocean is nothing less than the story of how humans first started building the globalized world we know today.
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"Several times during the narrative the author confuses the cardinal directions, for example, saying that the Caspian Sea is west of the Don River."
"The steppe has been a cultural highway, and among its passengers have been domestication of the horse, the idea of the chariot, artistic trends, religions, crops, the plague, pilgrims, diplomats and pillaging armies. However, some of the text concerns events in the more developed regions such as the long confrontations between the Romans/ Byzantines and the various empires based in Iran; the book is quite good on these, There's also a lot of Chinese history. Bothe these can be a bit tedious but reading about them in parallel so to speak helps one realize the continuity and connectedness of it all, rather than the usual consideration in isolation of each other."
"In broad historic terms, Sir Barry shakes the kaleidoscope through which world (or at least Eurasian) history is viewed, from a series of discrete eras to a very long term view, and from a series of individual cultures to the way in which those cultures were tied together by the steppes. For an American or European reader, the traditional view of Eurasian history is that of one center of civilization giving way to another (the Fertile Crescent, the Mediterranean, Northern Europe), a sort of updated Whig version of history that culminates with "the west". It's tempting to say that Sir Barry gives us a new way of looking at world history, but it's not accurate: this isn't world history: it excludes the whole western hemisphere, most of Africa, and much of non-Chinese Asia."
"This book is especially interesting because it deals with the Silk Road and all the cultures it touched."
Best Fairy Tales, Folk Tales, Legends & Mythology Literary Criticism
In celebration of of the 75th anniversary of this classic bestseller, this stunningly illustrated, beautifully packaged, larger-format hardcover edition will be beloved by fans of Greek, Roman, and Norse mythology of all ages. She regarded as the high point of her life a 1957 ceremony in which King Paul of Greece named her an honorary citizen of Athens.
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"It's a classic for good reason."
"Required for freshman English class."
"Good book, but mine came with the spine bent ever so slightly diagonally that it drives me insane."
"This book gives you details about the gods that you didn't know you wanted to know!"
"Edith Hamilton's classic."
"Needed this For my English IS class and it provided spot on and flawless information over Greek mythology down to the core."
"books are great (and we ha to have it for school)."