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E**M
A Short Review of a Short Course in Reading French
If you’re like me you’re looking at this book because there is an exam in your future—maybe your very near future. I began this book with all the anxious energy of having to pass a PhD proficiency exam. I would’ve torn through the pages except for the word of pedagogy the author was kind enough to share at the start: work slowly, she admonished, let speed build organically, she said. That bit of sage advice was what I needed to get myself to stop and take breath. So, Instead of rushing, tumbling, skipping over the surface, I began working my way slowly, deeply—and then—joyously, through the book. What happened next was what I think you call… learning. Another bit of strategic frustration built into the book was also just as critical. No answer key! At first that took me aback. How was I, outside of a classroom, going to know whether I was getting any of it right? My first thought was to email the author for the key, but then I gave the book a chance. The author explained that if I had an answer key I would give in to the temptation of jumping to it every time I hit a knotty problem. And… she was totally right. I would have. In fact, I’ve done that. Not having a key was the best thing! I puzzled through every “what, how come?” moment. And, honestly, it made me marvel at the safe-cracker skill of the calibration of questions and translation exercises. All those knots were hard enough that I had to work at them, but none that weren’t supplied with all the necessary tools. As each gave way, linguistic mechanism by mechanism, I thought again, that’s right, this is what you call… learning. There is one kind of confidence that comes from the gratification of mechanically matching an answer key, and there seems to be another that comes from understanding the living language itself. You become, slowly, but increasingly sure of your translations because, as you patiently engage it, it yields its inner workings to you. You know you are right, because, you are starting to know French. There are so many fat volumes that just lay on the desk pinned down by a bloated taxonomy of linguistic data—There’s one such introduction to French literally collecting dust in my bedroom right now—The primer Celia Brickman has produced is nimble elegance, and it’s always on hand in my satchel. It seemed to understand what I needed—and what I didn’t—in order to understand the language, and therefore felt more like a fluent partner than a ruler-straight matron.I wanted to write a review, not just because last week I strolled in and out of my French proficiency brimming, almost humming, but because something else happened along the way to my exam: I actually learned French and I learned to love French. If you think this review is already too glowing and uncritical, I can do you one better. Honestly, the first thing I did after the proficiency test? Well, I celebrated and relaxed for an hour. Then… I went to Starbucks and read French philosophy. Voila!I am under no pretense that everyone will have a uniform response to this book. As with any thing, you get what you give it. You have to take it seriously, there’s no getting around the hard work of learning a new language. But, with any truly good thing, it makes you want to give what it asks for. It convinces you that it’s worth it, and gains your trust that reward will follow. Grammar books get as boring as grammar books when all they care about are the technicalities. To be sure, this book is precise, and unfolds its arrangement in a model of efficiency and calculated accessibility. However, you get the sense the author is not interested in dissecting orthography and morphology as much as mediating an encounter with French itself. I’m sure many books get the syntax and the semantics of French right, but this one, well—it captures some of the sparkle too.
C**M
Okay introduction, but not a full course
This book is useful for learning elementary reading French. By itself, it won't get you to super advanced academic work, and you'll need to put in a lot of work on your own to get there. However, it is a good primary text if you need to brush up or are just getting started.
Q**.
Learning comes alive in this fine book. In fact
This book is truly one of a kind. In a world where true language acquisition, and where notions of internalizing the nuances of language have rather receded to the backside amongst both scholastic ideals and lay presumptions, we finally find a book that reveals the real power of intellectual prowess and integrity.Celia Brickman does with this book what almost every aspiring author of language learning desires: make the reader more able and functional with the particular language that she is studying but also inspired by the entire experience. Learning comes alive in this fine book. In fact, many of the language learning apps out there can learn a good deal from this text. Plunging hard and deliberately into this text will reap tremendous rewards.Celia is a top rate scholar of French, and what she does for the English reader wanting to learn to read French, is absolutely wonderful. For the middle schooler to the retired herdsman wanting to learn to read French - buy this one! It’s a good read, and full of depth and intentionality. It works both as a workbook and a reference text. It’s fun! French modern history will make more sense. French cuisine will say a great deal more than "bon appetite."Adieu!
J**G
This is a wonderful textbook for someone wanting to learn how to translate ...
This is a wonderful textbook for someone wanting to learn how to translate French texts for academic purposes. The sample texts Brickman includes are classic passages that will interest the translator, not just be rote exercises. My only issue with the book is there are some obvious mistakes, usually in the headings of tables. If there is a second edition, this book would benefit greatly from a good copyeditor.
E**M
Excellent resource for students needing to pass a written translation exam!
I took Ms. Brickman's course through the Hyde Park Language Program while she was developing this book many years ago. I decided to buy her book as a bit of a refresher course and I am not disappointed. Going through it and doing the exercises brought me right back to her class. I cannot recommend this book enough.
S**I
Five Stars
good for passing the french reading requirement for humanities phd's
T**.
Describing this book as useful for self-study of the French language is borderline fraud
Describing this book as useful for self-study of the French language is borderline fraud. Its big selling point is that it will help graduate students learn enough French to translate excerpts of advanced-level texts, which is required by many schools for M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in the humanities. Not to include English translations in such a book is indefensible. This book, therefore, is no different from any standard French textbook -- actually less useful because they all translate some of the passages in them. Worse yet, the excerpts included by the author, about which she brags in her Introduction that they were "selected from a variety of prominent French theoretical, historical, and literary sources, classical and contemporary," are nothing that cannot easily be found online. The lack of effort (she cribbed much of it from another author's work that she used to "teach" from) and true didactic purpose exhibited by this book are appalling. A student would be better off with any of the dual-language texts from Dover Publications and the Ultimate French Review and Practice from McGraw Hill. Amazon should make the publisher of this book state in boldface in its promotional description that the book contains no Answer Key for anything in the book. A real waste of money.
K**Y
Five Stars
It's a great book for breaking down the basics. Great for grad students taking a language qualifying exam!
M**S
No answer key except for approved professors and teachers
Three weeks after my request for the answer key, it was forthcoming, and so I've revised my rating upwards, although not to five stars, as the answer key is not provided as a matter of course.I bought the Kindle version with a view to surveying it for use with private students. Content looks fine but I didn't realise until after purchase that there is no answer key and that to get it you have to contact Columbia University Press and hope that they accept that you are 'a professor or teacher who has assigned this title in a class'. Name, title, institution, and number of students in the course are to be submitted. I did so, but received no reply and so returned the book to Amazon. The blurb does not make it clear that the book is only for those who are being formally taught, so avoid this publication if you require a text for self-study. That a an answer key is not provided with a publication aimed at graduate students is to view them as akin to naughty school children who can't be trusted not to cheat. Pathetic!
A**F
A great course to develop reading skills in French
This is an excellent training workbook geared at developing reading skills in French. While it doesn't include speaking skills, it does have a pronunciation guide to help you get the sounds right in your head.I have been using it in conjunction with Duolingo for further reinforcement consistently over the past 6 weeks and it has been incredibly useful and challenging (in a good way!).
W**Y
Five Stars
My class at Oxford recommended this book for humanities reading class. Definitely the best guidance I've ever had!
O**R
a fantastic, no-nonsense course in French literacy
As the other reviews state, a fantastic, no-nonsense course in French literacy.
K**G
Five Stars
im finishing the book.. nice
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