s/t: An Encyclopedia of World Literature and the Arts Reference book on the symbols, movements, genres, characters & individuals found in Arts & Literature--as well as disciplines which are effected, or are alluded to, in these fields.
William Rose Benet is long gone but his work (now at well over 1000 pages) is alive and well covering most all the major works, writers, and movements up to its publication date. You can remember (with the help of an entry) who “Raffles” was. Or, find out what was the extent of “gaucho literature.” Or, get the author and plot summary of “Twenty-six Men and a Girl.”
I have the heavy-weight hardbound edition, but I am sure it would work as well or better in electronic version. However, I have not seen such offered. Is it at all necessary in this world of: “Hey Siri, Who was Sciron?”
This is an indispensible book for the serious reader. I note that Tara S. is currently reading Absalom, Absalom, and I am reminded that it was given to me as a gift after we read that book in book club – in 1990. (I own the third edition.)
When I was 16, my high school librarian, my mentor and guardian angel, gave me a copy of the Second Edition. I literally read it from cover to cover. I returned to it over and over, for specific information or for random pleasure. No other book has influenced the path of my reading as much. I have not seen the later editions but I do hope they have maintained the same excellence.
Can’t remember if you read that book? Interested in brief author info? Want to check an unfamiliar reference in your latest reading? Here it is. Unfortunately, with easy internet access, I am assuming this book’s time has come.
I have read & referred to this book for over 10 years. It is endlessly fascinating, entertaining & enlightening. Even if I never intend to read the full version of a book, this encyclopedia provides a quick yet encompassing understanding & awareness of many great works of literature. This encyclopedia was & still is literature's "Google".
Pick this book up, flip through its pages, and you'll find that you've passed an hour or two without noticing it. It's an addiction and one topic is referenced to at least two others within the same pages. A reference book with gusto!
this kind of book is outdated so quickly, but i loved this as a teenager and spent hours poring over it. it's still useful for plot summaries, characters, authors, etc. nothing fancy, but certainly absorbing.
I love any book that makes me feel so smart when I'm reading it. Or should I say skimming, with the promise to myself that I will, one day, read it from cover to cover.