Arab Times

Reader-friendly ‘literary’ criticism book top seller

‘Great foundation­al docu’ ‘Killing’ No. 1 ‘Two’ steady atop US best-selling list

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WBy Hillel Italie

hen Rachel Stewart was a rising senior at Bellbrook High School in Ohio, her assigned reading for AP Literature included a work of criticism that she dreaded getting through: “How to Read Literature Like a Professor” by Thomas C. Foster.

“When I heard the title, I thought it was going to be pretty boring, but I surprising­ly really liked it,” says Stewart, now an English major at Ohio State University. “I thought it was presented in an engaging way ... and I would recommend it to others if they want to get some insight on how to analyze literature.”

Published in 2003, “How to Read Literature Like a Professor” has been included in hundreds of high school and college courses nationwide and become a wordof-mouth best-seller, with sales topping 1 million copies, according to HarperColl­ins. Nielsen BookScan, which tracks around 85 percent of the print market, reports more than 100,000 copies sold so far this year.

Foster, 64, is a resident of East Lansing, Michigan, who in 2014 retired as a professor of English at the University of Michigan-Flint. Like many academics, much of his work has been for the scholarly market, including books on poet Seamus Heaney and novelist John Fowles. He first thought of “How to Read Literature Like a Professor” while on sabbatical.

Collect

“For some reason, I recalled a silly conversati­on with a student several years before in which he said he and another student were going to collect the ‘sayings of Dr Tom’ into a book,” he told The Associated Press.

“I denied that I had ‘sayings’ and after some back and forth, he came up with ‘every trip is a quest.’ That became the first chapter title. It turned out there were more of those stock phrases than I had thought. I decided to see if there might be a book in there, and the first few chapters more or less wrote themselves. The later ones were harder, but by then the die was cast.”

Foster writes in a conversati­onal style, as if addressing students who expect to be bored. He uses modern slang and likens classic works to contempora­ry pop culture, whether mentioning Dante and Merle Haggard in the same sentence or finding common ground between Thomas Pynchon’s “The Crying of Lot 49” and some famous movies.

“It does look a bit weird at first glance, experiment­al and superhip, but once you get the hang of it, you see that it follows the convention­s of a quest tale,” he writes. “So does Huck Finn. ‘The Lord of the Rings.’ ‘North by Northwest.’ ‘Star Wars.’ And most other stories of someone going somewhere and doing something, especially if the going and the doing wasn’t his idea in the first place.”

Instructor­s who have used “How to Read Literature” responded to Foster’s informal approach. Angela Brown, who teaches English at Delbarton School in Morristown, New Jersey, found the book a welcome contrast to the dry “door stoppers” that are usually published about literary analysis. She assigns it as summer reading for her 11th grade language and compositio­n class.

“It’s a great foundation­al document for everyone to read,” she says. “From day one, we go right into essay writing and I notice that a lot of our early conversati­ons are related directly to the book.”

Foster says he has received some criticism over the years, ranging from minor

LOS ANGELES, Oct 23, (RTRS): Nicholas Sparks’ novel “Two by Two” held onto the top spot on the weekly US fiction bestseller­s’ list for a second week on Thursday, holding off author Jodi Picoult’s latest book.

Data released by independen­t, online and chain bookstores, book wholesaler­s and independen­t distributo­rs across the United States was used to compile the list.

Hardcover Fiction

1. “Two by Two” – Nicholas Sparks (Grand Central)

2. “Small Great Things” — Jodi Picoult (Ballantine)

3. “Order to Kill” — Flynn/Mills (Atria/Bestler)

4. “Woman of …” — Patterson/ Paetro (Little, Brown)

5. “Home” — Harlan Coben (Dutton)

6. “Crimson Death” — Laurell K. Hamilton (Berkley)

7. “Commonweal­th” — Ann Patchett (Harper)

8. “Twelve Days of Christmas” — Debbie Macomber (Ballantine)

9. “The Book of Mysteries” — Jonathan Cahn (Frontline)

10. “Today Will Be Different” — Maria Semple (Little, Brown)

Hardcover Non-Fiction

1. “Killing the Rising Sun” — O’Reilly/Dugard (Holt)

2. “Skinnytast­e Fast and Slow” — Gina Homolka (Clarkson Potter)

3. “Born to Run” — Bruce Springstee­n (Simon & Schuster)

4. “… Always” — Sarah Young (Thomas Nelson)

5. “Is This the End?” — David Jeremiah (W)

6. “Filthy Rich” — Patterson/ Connolly (Little, Brown)

7. “Thug Kitchen 101” — Thug Kitchen (Rodale)

8. “Think Better, Live Better” — Joel Osteen (FaithWords)

9. “Hillbilly Elegy” — Vance (Harper)

10. “Hero of the Empire” — Candice Millard (Doubleday)

J.D.

factual correction­s to a “little bit of hate mail” from students. He remembered one teen complainin­g that everything in Foster’s book had already been explained in 9th-grade English class. Foster’s response: The student had a really great teacher.

Currently promoting his new book, “Reading the Silver Screen,” Foster has written a kids’ version of “How to Read Literature Like a Professor” and in 2014 released a revised edition of the original book. Some of the changes were inspired by his visits to schools when he found himself emphasizin­g that students should form their own opinions and not simply accept his.

“Who can tell you that you didn’t feel or think what you know you felt and thought while you were reading?” he says. “Reading is really an act of imaginatio­n, just as much as writing is, and the text is where two imaginatio­ns come together to create meaning. It took me decades to fully realize and embrace that insight; I’m just trying to speed up the process a little for my readers.” (AP)

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