Well it depends what kinds of books you're looking to find. Publishers Weekly, Booklist, Hornbook, School Library Journal, Library Journal, Kirkus Reviews, etc. all come to mind as review journals for books. I'm sure each specialized journal has its own literature to review.
For classic literature, you should look in academic journals if you're looking for scholarly criticism and assessment...and if you're looking for the actual reviews of when they were first released...such as original reviews from when Gone With The Wind came out for example....libraries would be most likely to have journals and/or magazines...or access to such through databases and whatnot.
2006-07-11 16:55:37
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answer #1
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answered by laney_po 6
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New York Review of books is widely considered the one of record. NY Times book review up there as well. For classic lit, also try English journals at your local college library or from the Internet.
2006-07-11 15:01:40
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answer #2
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answered by ebillar 1
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Does it should be out of those 4? Jane Austen is dreadfully boring, i tried studying delight and Prejudice and experience and Sensibility and in simple terms couldn't end. I surely have not in any respect examine Persuasion yet i imagine it ought to nicely be like that too. My pal examine Tess of the d'urbervilles and appeared to love it for her English lit self sustaining study. I have not in any respect examine Carlotte Bronte so i will't say forsrue what she is like. in case you are able to make a call from something different, flow with The Adventures of Huckelberry Finn by Mark Twain or Lolita by Vladimir Nobokov. those are some mind-blowing classics that kept my interest (plus there are great essay matters you are able to talk in them). i became in a complicated Placement English classification and we had to do a classic self sustaining study each and every 12 months and those are 2 out of the three books I wrote on and that i quite loved them. Lolita is about this pedophile and that is exciting because you quite hate him yet then at situations you experience sorry for him. that's a very exciting examine and it may provide plenty to talk about on your record/essay because of each and every thing that takes position. The Aventures of Huckleberry Finn is excellent because there is experience (as reported in the call) and that's o.k. written and has a exceptional plot. It deals with prejudice and racism so as that still supplies you some good issues to seem into.
2016-10-14 09:20:13
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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The "industry standard" for libraries is Ingram's "Ingram Advance" magazine, that offers reviews, summaries, and pricing information for all the new books they put out each month (which account for 40-60% of the mainstream publishing market, or so I hear). You may be able to sign up for their magazine for free - heaven knows they keep sending me two copies a month, and I'm not paying anything for it! (I'm a librarian, though . . .)
2006-07-12 06:56:53
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answer #4
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answered by theycallmewendy 4
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