The average rating for The silent majority based on 2 reviews is 2.5 stars.
Review # 1 was written on 2010-01-21 00:00:00 John Walker A highly readable, if somewhat superficial, history of romance novels. It digs into the history of it as a commercial genre, sticking firmly with romance as a popular fiction style and charting its progress against other literary forms as well as against the mores of the day. While I would have liked to have seen a little more about the precursors of the earliest commercial successes this is an interesting read, especially to someone like me who knows very little about this genre. |
Review # 2 was written on 2014-07-26 00:00:00 Ronald Key Table of Contents, for future reference: 1 - The regional novel: themes for interdisciplinary research By K. D. M. Snell 2 - Regionalism and nationalism: Maria Edgeworth, Walter Scott and the definition of Britishness By Liz Bellamy 3 - The deep romance of Manchester: Gaskell's ‘Mary Barton’ By Harriet Guest 4 - Geographies of Hardy's Wessex By John Barrell 5 - Gender and Cornwall: Charles Kingsley to Daphne du Maurier By Philip Dodd 6 - James Joyce and mythic realism By Declan Kiberd 7 - Cookson, Chaplin and Common: three northern writers in 1951 By Robert Colls 8 - Emyr Humphreys: regional novelist? By M. Wynn Thomas 9 - Scotland and the regional novel By Cairns Craig 10 - Mapping the modern city: Alan Sillitoe's Nottingham novels By Stephen Daniels, Simon Rycroft |
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