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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Shake Hands With the Greats: The Book of Great Books, June 22, 2002
This review is from: The Book of Great Books: A Guide to 100 World Classics (Hardcover)
Let's face it. Who is the most likely reader of THE BOOK OF GREAT BOOKS by W. John Campbell? Probably the same people who buy Monarch Notes, Cliff's Notes, and the like. That is students in high school and college who doubt that they lack the time, inclination, or ability to plow through a series of novels, poems, plays, and essays. What Campbell's book does is to break down what seems an imposingly difficult work of literature so that after ten minutes a reader can get a sense of the 'big picture.' Campbell has chosen 100 of the generally accepted classics of English, American, European, and Greek and Roman works that have survived the test of time to be called that. Each work is divided into a plot summary, a handy picture that connects the major characters in terms of how they relate, the background, key characters, themes, symbols, style, structure, and critical overview. The level of detail and the degree of analysis is just enough to permit the reader to follow the work and still retain the joy of reading the original. Nowhere does Campbell bog the reader down in detail sufficiently heavy to cause him to wonder why he bought TBGB in the first place. One of the problems that I had in reviewing this book is that Campbell makes no attempt to discuss exactly what a great book is and why he chose the one hundred that he did. I would have appreciated an introduction which could have clarified those two points. As it is, TBGB is simply a valuable addition to the bookshelf of anyone who likes to think that he is a reader of the classics.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Great Book on Great Books, June 17, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: The Book of Great Books: A Guide to 100 World Classics (Hardcover)
FACT: Each book is summarized and analyzed by sections. The author summarizes the action in a chapter-by-chapter Plot Summary, which ends with a very useful Character Chart schematic thingie that makes character relationships crystal clear. (Why isn't anyone else using this kind of chart?) Background section covers type of work (epic poem, adventure novel, etc.), author's background, setting. Key Characters section gives a couple sentence overview of each. Main Themes & Ideas section has a paragraph on each theme, and in my opinion this is the most useful part in aiding understanding of each analysis. Main Symbols: self-explanatory. Style & Structure section analyzes and evaluates other literary elements of the work: language, tone, irony, figures of speech such as metaphor and simile, foreshadowing, plot and composition. Critical Overview covers the relationship of the work to the society and time from which it emerged or how critics and readers react to the work's main ideas. Each book critique is about 8 pages long. It addresses mostly the works of "classic" authors--shakespeare, conrad, virgil, homer, chaucer, miller, milton, dante, tolkien, hemingway, ibsen, dickens, swift, steinbeck, orwell, melville, austen, camus, c. bronte, hawthorne, shelley, twain, wharton--yet there are a few post-modern works too--Joy Luck Club, The Bluest Eye, Caged Bird Sings, Color Purple. OPINION: This wonderful book deserves much more attention than it's gotten. More than just a plot summary, it's a very useful and fast guide to literary analysis and evaluation of some major Western Civlization literary works, and it would serve any high school or college student well. My sole complaint is that it only covers 100 Great Books. Desperate Comp. I and II students will love this (hint-hint!) The price was right, too.... The Main Themes & Ideas section is quite helpful in understanding the central message an author is trying to convey by his work, and it's made several hard-to-fathom plays and books easier for me to grasp. It's probably inevitable that it will be compared to Cliff Notes, yet the critiques are briefer, easier to read, more fun, and perhaps not so penetrating and comprehensive. This book ought to be on the shelf of everyone's personal library--along with a copy of How to Read a Book by Mortimer J. Adler. Happy reading!
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An overview of the classics, December 25, 2003
This review is from: The Book of Great Books: A Guide to 100 World Classics (Hardcover)
In "The Book of Great Books," W. John Campbell provides an overview of 100 of the world's greatest classics, both fiction and nonfiction. It includes only American and European authors, from ancient to modern times. This is an arbitrary list, of course, and some of your favorite classics may not be included. Out of curiosity, I compared these titles to those on the Random House list of the 100 best novels. 20% of the Random House titles were included here. This volume is a sort of abridged Cliff's Notes in that it covers the historical background, summary, major characters and themes, symbolism, style, and a critical overview of each title. Reading this book is no substitute for reading the great classics themselves. Instead, this is a good reference book to consult when you are trying to recall the name of a character or a detail from the plot of a book you read a while ago. This book is now back in print as a Barnes & Noble publication.
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