Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Book 24: How to Read a Book

How to Read a Book by Adler is designed to help readers "whose main purpose in reading books is to gain increased understanding."  The book progresses through 4 levels of reading:  elementary reading (the basic skills of reading), inspectional reading (pre-reading to determine the type of book and how it is set up), analytical reading (reading with the purpose of understanding), and syntopical reading (reading across several books to put together ideas).  The majority of the book is dedicated to expounding the third type of reading first by setting up general rules to follow with a focus mainly on expository literature.  The first stage of analytical reading involves determining the type of book, its main idea, its structure, and its purpose.  The second stage involves determining the key terms and how they are being used, identifying the propositions and arguments, and determining the degree of success the author has in achieving his purpose.  He then argues in favor of the importance of reading the book in its entirety and with an open mind before criticizing its contents as well as setting limits on the criticism based on the author being uninformed, misinformed, illogical, or having incomplete analysis.  The remainder of the book discusses how to apply these rules to various types of books with the exception of the final chapters dedicated to syntopical reading.

I would consider this book to be for ages 16 and up.  It is well laid out and understandable.  Because its main focus is expository books and it only deals briefly with fiction and poetry, it's not really designed for working with that type of literature.  If your main interest in improving your reading relates to literary analysis, then this is not the book to read.  It is an excellent primer for non-fiction, and I consider it worth the considerable amount of time I invested in reading it.

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Book 23: The Titan's Curse

The Titan's Curse by Riordan is the third book in the Percy Jackson series.  The Olympic gods and the Titans are both actively seeking and recruiting as many half-bloods as they can find.  When Percy, Thalia, Grover, and Annabeth travel to a military school to rescue two half-bloods, they find themselves face-to-face with a manticore.  As they battle the monster, the goddess Artemis arrives and wounds the monster, which then jumps over the nearby cliff with Annabeth.  Percy tells the goddess everything that the manticore said before the battle.  She is particularly interested in what he says about the stirring of ancient monsters that have not been seen for a long time.  She admits to sensing a new monster and decides to send her hunters back to Camp Half-Blood to go hunting alone for the ancient creature.  Shortly after her arrival in camp both Percy and the head hunter Zia have dreams about the goddess being captured and in deep trouble.  The oracle warns that 5 must be sent on the quest and predicts that one will be lost, another must withstand the Titan's curse, and a third will be killed by a parent.  Despite the ominous warning 2 hunters including Zia and the girl from the military school must join forces with Thalia, Percy, and Grover in a quest to rescue Artemis and return one newly freed Titan to his rightful place.

The Titan's Curse is on par with the first two books in the series.  I still maintain my disagreement with Riordan's choice of narrator.  As with the other two books, some portions of the book are predicable to someone familiar with Greek mythology, but it doesn't detract from the face-paced, non-stop action in the story.  Another light fluffy read for those who enjoy Greek mythology.

Sunday, June 2, 2013

Book 22: The Horse and His Boy

The Horse and His Boy by C. S. Lewis is the third story in the Chronicles of Narnia series and is set during the reign of King Peter, Queen Susan, King Edmund, and Queen Lucy.  The story begins in Calorman, south of Narnia, with a young boy named Shasta who has worked his whole life for a fisherman.  One day, a nobleman stops at their home for the night and asks to buy the boy.  Shasta overhears the fisherman explain how he found the boy as an infant, and the two men begin bargaining over a price.  The boy slips out to the stable and wonders aloud what type of master the nobleman would be until suddenly he unexpectedly receives an answer from Bree, the nobleman's horse.  Bree is a Narnian born talking horse, who wishes more than anything to escape Calorman and return home, so the pair agree to make their escape together that very night.  As they journey north one night they meet Avaris, a young Calorman girl running away to escape marrying an old man, and Hwin, a Narnian mare who like Bree was captured at a young age and brought to Calorman.  The four continue on together until they suddenly become separated in the city of Tashbaan when Shasta is mistaken by the visiting party of King Edmund to be young Prince Corin of Archenland.  The encounter proves useful as Shasta learns how to cross the great desert beyond the city and Avaris overhears the plans of Prince Rabadash to conquer Archenland and retrieve the Queen Susan from Narnia to be his bride.  The four must move quickly to warn King Lune of Archenland before the Calorman army launches its surprise attack; but when Avaris is wounded and the horses exhausted, Shasta must continue alone on foot.

The Horse and His Boy is one of the less popular books in the Narnia series, but it is still an amazing story and well worth reading again and again.  I highly recommend it for ages 8 and up.