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Lädt ... Great American Bestsellers: The Books That Shaped Americavon Peter Conn
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Literary Criticism.
Nonfiction.
HTML: Best-selling books have played a critical role in influencing the tastes and purchasing habits of American readers for more than 100 years. But there is more to America's great best-selling books than the sales figures they rake in. American bestsellers also offer us ways to appreciate and understand particular periods of American culture. In this series of 24 lectures you'll enjoy a pointed look at key best-selling works and their places within the greater fabric of American cultural history. Guided by an award-winning teacher, you'll explore representative bestsellers at various stages of American history, from the first book published in the English-speaking New World to the blockbuster authors who dominate the 21st-century publishing industry. The result is an expert look at the evolution of American culture - its tastes, its hopes, its dreams - through the unique lens of the books that have captivated its readers at various points in American history. Each of the 22 works discussed - from literary masterpieces ( The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn ) to enduring self-help books ( How to Win Friends and Influence People ) - has had a crucial and unique impact on American society. Studying these representative works will give you a deeper understanding of how American literature can both mirror the events of its time and, in many instances, have a pronounced impact on them. These lectures are your opportunity to see our nation's best-selling books as more than just popular forms of entertainment that have managed to make their authors lots of money, but as stunning microcosms of American cultural history. .Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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Google Books — Lädt ... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.009Literature English (North America) American fiction By typeKlassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:
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The premise is that in each lecture the author will explore how a specific American best seller reflects the era in which it was written. He starts with the Puritans (The Bay Psalm Book) and goes through David McCullough's biography of John Adams, which was published in 2012. New England bookends, I guess. In a final chapter he talks about recent trends in best sellers, focusing on franchise authors such as John Grisham, Tom Clancy, Michael Crichton and Danielle Steele. A common thread among these contemporary books, he thinks, is a fascination with information - details about law, medicine, technology and glamorous living.
Unfortunately I can't say his commentary added much to my appreciation of the 22 books he discusses, or my understanding of how they reflected their time. Most of it seemed painfully self-evident, at least to any reader with a decent understanding of American history. It seemed clear that the author was reading directly from notes, and although his delivery wasn't particularly bad, it was choppy and not particularly engaging. He did pique my curiosity about [b:The Woman Warrior|30852|The Woman Warrior|Maxine Hong Kingston|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1541333110l/30852._SY75_.jpg|1759] and I've added it to my TBR.
One last comment: The author omits a few 21st century developments that, I think, have changed the landscape of reading in the 21st century: ebooks, audiobooks, and the use of social media (primarily Goodreads but others as well) as a means of direct interaction among readers. At first I thought maybe the timing was a problem, but all of those media were around, even if only in a fledgling state, at that time. I tend to think he probably just updated his teaching notes to add in the McCullough book. He extols Oprah's book club at great length, but seemed to feel the big book club time had passed. Ha! ( )