The western lit survival kit An irreverent guide to the classics, from Homer to Faulkner

Sandra Newman, 1965-

Book - 2012

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809/Newman
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 809/Newman Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York : Gotham Books c2012.
Language
English
Main Author
Sandra Newman, 1965- (-)
Physical Description
xii, 280 p. ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781592406944
  • Greece: cradle of Greek civilization
  • Rome: when the world was ruled by Italians
  • The Middle ages and points between
  • The Renaissance: back to the future
  • William "look at me, I get my own chapter" Shakespeare
  • Here come the Puritans: parade, meet rain
  • France and England in the seventeenth century: the shallows
  • The age of reason or: when people wised up and started believing what we believe
  • The romantics: the author as (the author's) hero
  • We also begin to have Americans
  • Nice realism: the novel novel
  • Unwelcome realism: the French and Russians team up to depress mankind
  • The messy twentieth: finally over.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

tour d'horizon of what you might encounter in a Great Books course in college. At first glance, Newman's (Read This Next, 2010, etc.) work comes across as a comedy routine meant to poke many of the received-opinion greats in the eye with a sharp stick, much in the manner of Ovid, one of the author's favorites. And that is certainly part, but far from all, of the truth. First, a typical zinger: "As a general note, all of Homer's heroes were illiterates who considered rape and genocide normal. Generations of European boys were raised on Homer. Just saying." The author is not here to venerate--though Shakespeare gets a pretty deep genuflection--or eviscerate: She appreciates genius and fine, intellectually thrilling writing. With each writer, she gets to the nub of a work or style from the outset ("The Bronte home was a little biosphere of literary misery"), and she is not afraid to venture her true feelings: Of Tristram Shandy: "Page for page, it's possibly the funniest novel ever." Newman is a serious fan of humor and a good roll in the hay: e.g., Sappho, Tom Jones and Gargantua and Pantagruel. Montaigne's Essays also get the nod, as do Dickinson, Kafka, Eliot and a holy host of others. Half the fun here is quibbling with her choices and tinkering with her rating system: How important are the books considered? How accessible are they? How much fun? Newman assigns each a number from 1 to 10, and despite all the levity, she has clearly (if seemingly surreptitiously) read deeply and brought serious rumination to the proceedings. A sly piece of work--though you still should read the books.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.