The definitive, contemporary reference on literature and literary criticism in English, this handbook provides an alphabetical listing of more than 2,000 important terms and facts in literature, linguistics, rhetoric, criticism, printing, bookselling, and information technology. Covers a wide range of terms, most centered in literature, but extending into other areas, such as film, radio, TV, printing, linguistics and literary theory, music, graphic arts, classical studies, and computing and information science terms. For anyone interested in literature and literary criticism.
There is something calming about dipping into this. Randomly opening it to a page, reading an entry, and falling down the rabbit hole of related terms. It's a wonderful thing.
Traditional guide through literary & rhetorical terminology. Basically indispensible for literary students. Does not contain much in the way of theory or criticism--that's for other items, such as the Columbia Dictionary of Modern Literary & Cultural Criticism.
This formed the central core of my liberal arts/educated by the Jesuit educated education.
get that?
This book was my mainstay as a student and English literature major. I have four different editions starting with my father's from his student days in the early 60's at the University of Scranton.
Note from July 2019: Have the paperback version of this 1960 edition. Have owned for 1,000 years and really hadn't examined until now.
September 2025: Finished. Read a zillion entries in alphabetical order from "Abstract Poetry" to "Zeugma," plus 75 pages of "Outline of Literary History English and American" at the end of the book. I read the outline first, all those years ago, and have been picking off the rest bit-by-bit ever since.
Needed two bookmarks because many entries contained a reference to another entry, so I usually went to that reference to see what we are supposed to know. And often the reference was behind my current place in the book (something I'd already read but probably didn't remember). Wherever that reference was, it often led to another reference (or two or three or . . .), so I needed one bookmark to leave at my current point-of-progress, because one never knew how long it would take to get back there. Could be days, as I was only reading a few entries at one sitting.
This 1960 edition is subtitled "Revised"; the original edition dates to 1936. At the moment I don't know if there is a newer edition . . . will look when I'm finished here.
NOTE -- I looked -- Goodreads has references to at least 12 editions.
Don't be fooled -- this is not a handbook to specific pieces of LITERTATURE as much as it is a handbook to literary terms and critical language. If and when it talks about specific pieces of LITERATURE, it's only because that literary work is an example of a particular element of literature. Much of it deals with poetic elements . . . most of those I quickly forgot. Of course, it HAS been six years . . . I've probably forgotten most of the book!
Hard to give a Goodreads Star rating . . . I'm calling halfway between "it was OK" and "liked it," thus 2.5 stars, and "liked it" was more "appreciated it" in my case. Will NOT be rereading, although I will retain in case I never need to explain "Zeugma."
I bought this book on sale for 25 cents (marked down from $2.75) at the University Book Store. Of course, I don't remember which of four or five universities it might have been . . . I'm suspecting The University of Missouri, simply because it was the only place with a bookstore specifically named University Book Store . . . that I can remember.
It is a handy book that can be read for pleasure. However, the publisher really doesn't need to update it every 3 years to force poor students to buy the new editions. In this 10th edition the editor admitted there was little substantial he could add. In fact, he mentioned his children suggested three new entries - "manga", "coffee table book" and "jumping the shark"- strangely, "jumping the shark" was not even actually added as the other two...Greedy publishers :-(, lousy work. Luck that I have learned not to buy the newest editions.
I put this on my Academic Life shelf, but this is such an essential read for anyone who loves literature. I'm so geeky that I used to sit down and read the articles in the Holman Handbook for the sheer joy of reading it. I love this book.
A must-have for literary folks. This is a Very useful tool for literary terms etc., deep and comprehensive entries. I studied with him at UNC Chapel Hill. He literally wrote the book on it with William Harmon, awesome poet also at UNC.