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Why do we read literature and how do we judge it? C. S. Lewis’ classic An Experiment in Criticism springs from the conviction that literature exists for the joy of the reader and that books should be judged by the kind of reading they invite. He argues that “good reading,” like moral action or religious experience, involves surrender to the work in hand and a process of entering fully into the...

admired is the realism—even with an approximation to trompel’œil—and the difficulty, real or supposed, of producing it. But all these comments, and nearly all attention to the picture, cease soon after it has been bought. It soon dies for its owners; becomes like the once-read novel for the corresponding class of reader. It has been used and its work is done. This attitude, which was once my own, might almost be defined as ‘using’ pictures. While you retain this attitude you treat the picture—or
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