* Features illustrations, charts and a glossary of literary and cultural terms* Suitable for upper--intermediate and advanced level students* Written by experts especially for non-native speakers of English
Ron Carter (1932-2008) was born in Salt Lake City and reared in Twin Falls, Idaho. He served received a bachelor’s degree in industrial management from Brigham Young University. He received a juris doctor degree in 1962 after attending the law schools at George Washington University and the University of Utah. Recently he has been a research and writing director for the Superior Court system of Los Angeles County, California. He published his first work in 1988.
Ron is married to LaRae Dunn Carter of Boise, Idaho, and they are the parents of nine children. The family resides in Park City, Utah.
Interesting facts were presented and a very easy read BUT the authors were clearly so patriotic it bordered on being ridiculous. We get it, you love England and the English language and Shakespeare is "the greatest playwright ever" but as an academic book written by two professors I was expecting more unbiased facts. Also, they treated every reader like the biggest dum dum in the world and instead of being helpful it just felt very patronising. Trust me, if I don't understand the words presented, I probably have no business reading this book, so stop filling the pages with "oh btw prologue means introduction", "chronicle = record of events, "non = not" , etc.
It's very pro-England. Yes, it is a book about British Literature, but I think that a university book should be a little less opinionated. Also, I don't like that they mention the rise of the fantasy and sf-genres without saying anything more about them (come on, TOLKIEN & PRATCHETT!!!). However, if you want a survey book about British Literature from Beowulf to Agatha Christie, this one does the job fairly well.
Dala bych taky 3,5 hvězdičky, mohlo to být i trochu lepší. Je to málo detailní, což mi trochu vadilo . Občas se tam začalo o něčem psát a začala se nějaká myšlenka ale nestihla se rozvést. Zároveň to ale má být shrnutí a pokud nevíte nic o britský literatuře, tak je to dobrej start. Nejvíc se mi líbily různý souhrny a timelines a celkově grafický zpracování. Taky tam bylo dost úryvků, což je fajn. Nejvíc mi vadil konec o moderní literatuře, kde byl fakt jen výpis autorů a děl, což mi přišlo na nic, protože si to takhle stejně nezapamatuju( na druhou stranu chápu že těch autorů je moc a nejde to všechno obsáhnout).
The information itself was very well presented and the writing was engaging. However, the consistent obsession with explaining what random words meant was insanely irritating. It was like having words mansplained to me throughout the whole book. I have compiled a short list of my absolute favourites: bear = large, fierce animal midsummer = middle of summer goddess = female god nightmare = frightening dream in want of = needing treasure Island = island of riches demon = devil.
Genuinely don’t know how I would have understood a word of this book about literature written for ADVANCED English literature students. I fear even upper intermediate English speakers should know all these words.