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Benet's Reader's Encyclopedia 5e: Fifth Edition
Benet's Reader's Encyclopedia 5e: Fifth Edition

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Author: Bruce Murphy
Publisher: Collins
Category: Book

List Price: $60.00
Buy New: $32.78
You Save: $27.22 (45%)



New (28) Used (6) from $32.78

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 184761

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 5
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 1232
Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.8
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 7.7 x 2.4

ISBN: 0060890169
Dewey Decimal Number: 803
EAN: 9780060890162
ASIN: 0060890169

Publication Date: December 1, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

Long recognized as the supreme reference on world literature, Benet's Reader's Encyclopedia is the single-most complete one-volume encyclopedia available for those with a serious interest in the subject.

More than 10,000 entries explore all aspects of literature from around the world: biographies of poets and playwrights, novelists and belletrists; plot synopses and character sketches from important works; historical data on literary schools, movements, terms, and awards; myths and legends; and more.

Completely revised and updated, the fifth edition continues to expand on the diversity of today's canon, with greater attention to traditions from around the globe. In particular, this edition brings new focus to the changing landscape of world religion and culture, as well as to accurate reflection of contemporary reexaminations and interpretations, such as those of the Ottomans, Olmecs, and Umayyads.

For more than sixty years, William Rose Benet and the editors who succeeded him have upheld the level of quality that distinguished the original Benet's Reader's Encyclopedia. Like its predecessors, this new edition will teach and delight, illuminate and expound, and enrich the pleasure of reading in countless ways.




Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars seven octaves too high   January 1, 2009
In response to
"James Patterson, Sue Grafton, Tom Clancy, Patricia Cornwell, (or pick your favorite living author) are now in here right? Sorry. Although Harry Potter has an entry, J.K. Rowling does not. You won't see Dan Brown or his "The Da Vinci Code" in here either."
I say:
A guide to literature has no need to include any of these authors, with maybe the exception of Grafton. But Clancy, Patterson, and especially Brown will hopefully fade with time. They write scripts, not books.

You have a good argument for the inclusion of the masterful "Remains of the Day," but Yan Martel probably plagiarized another novel for 'Life of Pi.'




1 out of 5 stars Disappointing   December 5, 2008
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

12 years since its last edition, this popular reference book has finally been updated, but the update is sadly disappointing. Why? Because other than updating information on contemporary authors and the addition of a few new entries (very few) it is basically the same book as the 1996 edition. Same editor, same layout, same font, same previous entries (word for word). In fact, there were so few new entries and modification of previous entries that in a few parts the text and page breaks of the 1996 book line up exactly with this 2008 edition. I should have sensed this before I bought the book, as there are only 66 pages more than the 1996 edition, with Bruce Murphy (who by this poor "editing" job is obviously a disinterested if not lazy academic) kept as the same editor. (If Murphy had no control, I apologize for the criticism.)

With the expansion of knowledge and information now available to so many more people (sparked almost exclusively by the Internet), one might think Benet's would have been due for a new look, if not complete overhaul. In other words, Benet's needed a substantial improvement over previous editions (which had many flaws) to inject some new knowledge and assessments of literary figures and works.

But there has been no improvement. Not even close. The editors and publisher of this Benet's edition continue to be stale and unimaginative, stuck in a time warp of bygone age. Maybe they just stalled on the on-ramp of the information superhighway. Rather than reflect the Darwinian struggle to evolve, Benet's Reader's Encyclopedia has devolved into a dinosaur in the Information Age.

Here are some changes I think were needed:

-Complete re-evaluation (if not revision) of numerous entries that have been left unchanged by Benet's for decades. Are all these previous entries in past editions of Benet's so well researched and infallible that they need no amending? In E.L. Doctorow's novel "Ragtime", the entry still says the protagonist (Colehouse Walker) "is probably based on composer Scott Joplin", which is complete nonsense. Walker is likely based on a character in a von Kleist novel.

-There also is no need any more for short paragraphs on selected U.S. Presidents, explorers, painters and other non-literary figures because the information is so sparse anyway it's essentially a waste to include them. Benet's should largely specialize in literature and not continue to be a pseudo -general reference book.

-More entries of contemporary authors. If you are looking to see if some of your favorite contemporary authors have now made it into this book, be ready for a letdown. James Patterson, Sue Grafton, Tom Clancy, Patricia Cornwell, (or pick your favorite living author) are now in here right? Sorry. Although Harry Potter has an entry, J.K. Rowling does not. You won't see Dan Brown or his "The Da Vinci Code" in here either. Of course Benet's has always looked at literary popularity equaling literary merit with a jaded eye (with some justification) so perhaps it is not surprising none of the aforementioned made the cut for the antiquated criteria of Benet's. It is unfortunate the stodgy Benet's still prefers entries for long dead, long forgotten authors who even at their best would now be considered pedestrian, and dated literary works that are never read and have not stood the test of time.

-Deletion of dated entries and ones that just don't seem to fit. Does Nazi Joachim von Ribbentrop really belong in the 2008 Benet's? (maybe in the 1948 Benet's, not 2008) French 18th century General Rochambeau? French journalist Jaures?

-More separate entries for recent novels and other literary works written within the last 15 years. (Benet's has none for any recent novels). How about entries for some notable Booker Prize winning novels such as "The Remains of the Day" (Ishiguro) or the "Life of Pi" (Yann Martel). (I believe there is only one separate entry for any Booker Prize winning book.)

-More emphasis on children's literature (other than the standard famous works).

-More entries for literary characters

-The book badly needed an infusion of creativity. Maybe include the origin of some famous nursery rhymes, add some famous literary quotes, literary settings, literary works made into film. Use your imagination.

Including all of these suggestions would add several hundred pages to this book, but would this really be a problem if you are trying to make this a pre-eminent literary reference? There are many good reference books around and over 2000 pages, so what's a few extra hundred pages for a book that is now barely 1200 pages.

If you have never read Benet's, there is still a fair amount of literary information. On literary information alone, the Benet's is a good 3 stars. Nevertheless, there is no excuse why Benet's is not a better book, and it is sad to see how this venerable reference book has regressed. Admittedly, this review is somewhat skewed by my expectations of what I think Benet's should be, but there lies my main point Benet's has not improved, and it needs to in order to stay relevant. With information so plentiful via the Internet, I believe this book may have run its course. 12 years since the last edition, I will be surprised if there is another edition after this one.

If you still want the updated version, here is a little of what this edition has added (although as stated earlier, there are not that many new entries, and no revision of older ones. The proof reading also shows sloppiness, William Styron is listed as living, he died in 2006). A few new entries in this 2008 edition include:

David Foster Wallace, Roman Polanski, James Ellroy, I.M. Pei, Louise Erdrich, Ellen Gilchrest, Turkish leader Mustafa Kemal (Ataturk), Robert J. Oppenheimer, and the Uncertainty Principle. A number of authors, especially from Africa Asia, and Latin America, make their first appearance. There are now separate entries for "Night" (by Elie Wiesel), "A Clockwork Orange", "Fahrenheit 451", "The Satanic Verses", "The Sheltering Sky" and a few other noted works. Contemporary authors in previous editions of Benet's have been now been updated. For easier reading, all cross-references are now shown in extra-large capital letters.




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