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| The Complete Idiot's Guide to Critical Reading | 
enlarge | Authors: Amy Wall, Regina Wall Publisher: Alpha Category: Book
List Price: $16.95 Buy New: $12.75 You Save: $4.20 (25%)
New (5) Used (9) from $7.29
Avg. Customer Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 407972
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 336 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 7.5 x 0.8
ISBN: 1592573401 Dewey Decimal Number: 808.0427 EAN: 9781592573400 ASIN: 1592573401
Publication Date: May 3, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description The essential guide to looking at literature with your own two eyes. What students know about Shakespeare, Orwell, Dickens, and Twain is primarily what their instructors tell them. Heres a book that teaches the students how to move on to the next levelevaluate and read critically on their own, trust their own opinions, develop original ideas, analyze characters, and find a deeper appreciation for fiction, non-fiction, poetry, and more. Ideal companion for college students and accessible for the casual reader as well Covers fiction, poetry, narrative nonfiction, biographies and memoirs, essays and editorials, and newspapers, magazines, and journals Features examples from published writing Includes a reading list and a glossary of literary terms
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| Customer Reviews:
A Guide That Grabs You From Page One and Holds You Captive June 7, 2006 28 out of 29 found this review helpful
How often have we heard the statement that someone is a prolific reader or that he or she is well-read? At first this may impress us, however, when you think about it, you have to ask how much these individuals retain and what are they getting out of their reading? As Amy Wall and Regina Wall point out in The Complete Idiot's Guide To Critical Reading, there is a difference between being well read and knowing how to read well. What counts is not quantity but rather the quality of your reading.
As mentioned, one of the principal ingredients of critical reading is the ability to effectively analyze what you are reading, which entails questioning and thinking about the material in front of you. It is taking an active role rather than merely passively accepting words on a page-something that unfortunately many of us were not taught while we were students.
Amy Wall is a writer and poet by night, and a TV news producers and newsroom manager by day. She has authored many instruction books and has published her poetry in an online literary journal. Regina Wall is currently a psychoanalytic psychotherapist. She began her career as a writing teacher at Michigan State University and eventually became a professor of Literature, Humanities and Women's Studies at Vanier College in Montreal, Canada. Together, they have teamed up to produce a manual that grabs you from page one, holding you captive until the very last page. The Complete Idiot's Guide To Critical Reading strikes just the right tone: direct, upbeat and accessible. The authors have taken pains not to sound preachy, while at the same time providing readers with dozens of pointers that provide tools and maps in helping us understand fiction and non-fiction. We are shown how to become relentlessly inquisitive about any book we have chosen to read from the moment we commence its reading until the last chapter.
Divided into twenty-one chapters, the Walls impart readers with informative and interesting detailed chapters on developing a critical eye towards reading different types of fiction and non-fiction literature. Each section takes on an A to Z approach with its uniform distribution of information wherein readers receive tutorial guidance as to how to become skilled at reading poetry, history, historical fiction, science, philosophy, essays and memoirs, newspapers, magazines, short stories, plays, understanding why an author tells a story in a particular way, literary techniques, and how to connect the dots in making sense of what you are reading. For example, if you refer to the chapter "Developing Your Critical Eye," we are given in depth instruction as to how to understand the facts an author presents in a work of non-fiction. Is the author expressing an opinion or is he or she interpreting the facts. Is there some kind of bias in the writing and how does the author's perspective compare against what we already know or believe. Ending each chapter, the authors provide a summation of the basic principles expounded upon and what is the least you should know. Moreover, the text is enlivened with user-friendly side-bars and concrete examples taken from well-known fiction and nonfiction books as Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn and several others.
Finishing up in perhaps true academic fashion, the manual provides chapters testing our knowledge of fiction and nonfiction. It is here where you are taught to connect the various pieces of writing to each other.
Also included is a comprehensive recommended reading list pointing the way for readers to track down must read novels and non-fiction and a helpful glossary. This is a "keeper" book and one that you will constantly refer to when assessing the quality of a book you have read.
Norm Goldman,Editor Bookpleasures
Wow - This is Great! June 25, 2005 13 out of 13 found this review helpful
Finally! Someone found a way to tell people not only HOW to read, but WHY it is so important to read - something my high school teachers never managed to drill into my head. The authors really get into the nitty gritty about the importance of reading. It's not just to be smarter but for your own personal growth and understanding of the world. If you have never read a play or poetry, you'll want to try it. If you are a reader of fiction, you'll understand what to look for in your reading which will allow you to read your favorite books in a whole new way. I don't read magazines at all, but this book even gets into that. If you're in school, you HAVE TO GET THIS BOOK! If you're not in school, get it anyway. It's good for everyone. Many thanks to the authors for finally saying it straight.
Finally! August 21, 2005 13 out of 13 found this review helpful
Someone shows the way in a manner that's accessible and easy to understand.
What's different about this book from others on the topic is that it doesn't rely on taking a few specific works and analyzing each of them to death. (If that had worked in high school and college, I wouldn't have bought this book. All that did was suck the fun out of reading anything 'literary'.)
Instead They discuss the main points and suggest questions for you to consider as you read. For example, in a fictional work, what is the role of the comic relief character (assuming there is one)? How are he/she essential to the story?
This book provides the tools for really getting the most out of what you read on your own terms.
Get this book! December 3, 2005 10 out of 11 found this review helpful
This book really opened my eyes about how to read books. I was flipping through it in the book store and it grabbed my attention for two reasons - it was written by a Mom/Daughter team and it reads very well. This is the best book I've ever read regarding why anyone should read books.
It is for idiots July 21, 2008 0 out of 3 found this review helpful
I purchased this Idiot's Guide thinking it might have something to offer to students who have trouble reading and writing critically. It offered nothing but obvious, tried and not true methods. I returned it.
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