Thomas C. Foster, "Twenty-five Books That Shaped
America: How White Whales, Green Lights, and Restless Spirits Forged
Our National Identity"
English | 2011 | ISBN: 0061834408 | 352 pages | epub | 2 MB
English | 2011 | ISBN: 0061834408 | 352 pages | epub | 2 MB
Book Description :
Works of imaginative literature from American writers are Foster's
choice for his "Great Books" list. Despite stilted language, Foster
says, Cooper's The Last of the Mohicans makes the cut because Cooper
shows us what a real, sprung-from-the-soil American hero looks like, and
because it gave us the first mixed-race buddy story—a notable
achievement in a racist time. Foster (How to Read Literature Like a
Professor) doesn't much like The Scarlet Letter, but includes it because
of Hawthorne's discerning eye for folly, hypocrisy, redemption, and our
capacity for error. Walden's importance is about being that still point
in the turning world; with Moby-Dick, Melville proves himself America's
avatar of complex, even mad narrative; and The Great Gatsby is the most
devastating portrait of capitalism run wild in Roaring 20s New York.
Among the titles rounding out the list are Leaves of Grass, Huck Finn,
My Antonia, The Cat in the Hat, On the Road, Song of Solomon, and Love
Medicine. Foster tries to balance the list with women and
African-American and Latino writers, though the classic canon and much
of the list is predictable. But Foster is a witty, quirkily provocative
and perceptive literary critic.
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