While reading GWTW, I've been in turn engrossed, fascinated, and sickened by the novel, so to untangle some of the more complicated reactions I thought it might be helpful to engage with other perspectives. (Although the fact that I was happy to put the novel aside to read about it instead of continuing on with the second half, is more damning than complimentary...) This book did provide some interesting historical context about: the writing of the novel, making of the movie, reactions at the time, and the breadth of readers/viewers' experiences with it. However, overall it lacked the depth of analysis or critique that I was truly seeking (as well as distracting awkward sentence constructions), so I'm left still unsatisfied.