Yes, I do realise that Laura O. Foster’s Walking with Ramona: Exploring Beverly Cleary's Portland is generally going to be focussing (and even from the book title itself) not so much on a detailed analysis of Beverly Cleary’s life and her oeuvre but more on interested travellers, on tourists visiting Portland, Oregon and its environs being given information and details on a number of Cleary inspired literary walks they might enjoy taking, which would certainly be interesting and useful if I were actually (sometime in the future) planning on travelling to Portland, but not so much if I am for the most part just looking for decent secondary information and resources on Beverly Cleary as an author.
But well, albeit that after noticing the book title (Walking with Ramona: Exploring Beverly Cleary's Portland), I was definitely and in fact already kind of expecting the above, indeed, I also was still thinking (and hoping) that Foster’s presented text would equally engage in a bit of literary analysis and interpretation of Cleary’s Portland-themed novels. And in my humble opinion, this never really is even remotely the case in Walking with Ramona: Exploring Beverly Cleary's Portland, as the rather small scale introduction to Beverly Cleary’s life and writing is both pretty basic and also pretty annoyingly frustrating. For while it is certainly true that Beverly Cleary’s Portland based novels focus quite a bit on her own childhood, to read Laura O. Foster in Walking with Ramona: Exploring Beverly Cleary's Portland basically totally equate in particular Ramona Quimby and her stories with her author’s, with Beverly Cleary’s life, it kind of makes me feel as though though the author, as though Laura O. Foster does not really think that Beverly Cleary has written truly original narratives, that all or at least most of her work is basically simply derivative, and this is most definitely rather majorly problematic to and for me.
And combined with the fact that ALL of the bibliographic materials included by Foster in Walking with Ramona: Exploring Beverly Cleary's Portland are about visiting Portland as a city and Oregon as a state and that there are really no true secondary sources for books about Beverly Cleary’s life and work to be found (and no, the list of Beverly Cleary’s Portland and Oregon novels does not in fact count here, as those are primary and not secondary works), for me, Walking with Ramona: Exploring Beverly Cleary's Portland has been both rather a huge disappointment and definitely not what I was either looking for or expecting.