If you ever want to read some of the great classics of English literature (anything in English) and want a quick teaching aid to them all, this is a very good beginning. I generally don't go in for literary criticism but I like instruction on what to read and why to read it. All of us avid readers need classic backgrounders for our everyday reading. What are the human themes of greatest importance and who are the great writers etc? Here, a University of Toronto professor, Bruce Meyer, does a very good job of instructing the average reader. Meyer is not hard to read - this is not another stuffy tome for the academic by any means. I thoroughly enjoyed his trip through the history of some of the literary greats from the Bible's Genesis to James Joyce's Ulysses and a lot of intriguing books in between.
Meyer breaks literature into major categories in which "home" and the search for a peaceful home place is the main factor driving human beings in life's struggle. It is very well done, and will enlighten the reader on what is most important when reading serious stuff. I came away with a hunger to read more of those literary greats, or at least preview them and plunge into some of them. I will remember Meyer's clear analysis for a long time to come, thanks in large part to his smooth and easy style of communicating it all.