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Use the menu below to learn how to write critical reviews of nonfiction
works.
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Write the body
| The body is the center of your paper, where
you draw out your main arguements. Below are some guidelines to help
you write it. |
| Organize using a logical plan |
Organize the body of your review according
to a logical plan. Here are two options:
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First, summarize, in a series of paragraphs, those major points
from the book that you plan to discuss; incorporating each major
point into a topic sentence for a paragraph is an effective
organizational strategy. Second, discuss and evaluate these
points in a following group of paragraphs. (There are two dangers
lurking in this pattern--you may allot too many paragraphs to
summary and too few to evaluation, or you may re-summarize too
many points from the book in your evaluation section.)
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Alternatively, you can summarize and evaluate the major points
you have chosen from the book in a point-by-point schema. That
means you will discuss and evaluate point one within the same
paragraph (or in several if the point is significant and warrants
extended discussion) before you summarize and evaluate point
two, point three, etc., moving in a logical sequence from point
to point to point. Here again, it is effective to use the topic
sentence of each paragraph to identify the point from the book
that you plan to summarize or evaluate.
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| Questions to keep in mind as you
write |
With either organizational pattern,
consider the following questions:
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What are the author's most important points? How do these relate
to one another? (Make relationships clear by using transitions:
"In contrast," an equally strong argument," "moreover,"
"a final conclusion," etc.).
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What types of evidence or information does the author present
to support his or her points? Is this evidence convincing, controversial,
factual, one-sided, etc.? (Consider the use of primary historical
material, case studies, narratives, recent scientific findings,
statistics.)
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Where does the author do a good job of conveying factual material
as well as personal perspective? Where does the author fail
to do so? If solutions to a problem are offered, are they believable,
misguided, or promising?
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Which parts of the work (particular arguments, descriptions,
chapters, etc.) are most effective and which parts are least
effective? Why?
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Where (if at all) does the author convey personal prejudice,
support illogical relationships, or present evidence out of
its appropriate context?
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| Keep your opinions distinct and
cite your sources |
Remember, as you discuss the author's
major points, be sure to distinguish consistently between the author's
opinions and your own.
Keep the summary portions of your discussion concise, remembering
that your task as a reviewer is to re-see the author's work, not
to re-tell it.
And, importantly, if you refer to ideas from other books and articles
or from lecture and course materials, always document your sources,
or else you might wander into the realm of plagiarism.
Include only that material which has relevance for your review
and use direct quotations sparingly. The Writing Center has other
handouts to help you paraphrase text
and introduce quotations.
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