- Roger Sale
Roger Sale is an American
literary critic and author. He spent most of his career as aprofessor of English at theUniversity of Washington . He is now retired from professional teaching.Children's literature
Sale's influence on
literary criticism is most evident in his work onchildren's literature . Prior to his work in the 1960s and 1970s, few professional critics chose to take children's literature seriously, but Sale argued that it could and ought to be given the same respect and scrutiny as adult fiction. In1978 , he published a book entitled "Fairy Tales and After", which is essentially a collection of essays defending the literary value of children's literature, and then offering his critical perspective on authors fromA. A. Milne toRudyard Kipling toBeatrix Potter .Sale is also credited with being among the first literary critics to seriously discuss the work of
J. R. R. Tolkien (which had been largely dismissed as "juvenile" and unworthy of analysis by most prominent critics, most notablyLionel Trilling ). His essay "Tolkien andFrodo Baggins " appeared in "Tolkien and the Critics " (ed. byNeal Isaacs andRose Zimbardo ) in1968 .Work as a journalist
Sale contributed frequently to the "
New York Review of Books " in the 1970s -- he wrote 39 reviews and articles for that publication from1971 to1983 , and offered his critical opinion of such now-notable books as "Ragtime" byE. L. Doctorow and "Dispatches " byMichael Herr .In an entirely different field, Sale served as an occasional columnist for the "
Seattle Weekly ", an alternative newspaper, covering theSeattle Supersonics ' season and playoff performance.Work as a historian
Surprisingly, although Sale's training and life's work focused on English literature, he is today perhaps best known as the author of a book of history -- specifically "".
External links
* [http://www.washington.edu/alumni/columns/sept99/class/sales.html A description (by a former student) of Sale's teaching in the early 1970s]
* [https://www.nybooks.com/authors/3526 A list of (and links to) the article written by Sale for the "New York Review of Books"]
* [http://www.unm.edu/~lhendr/ Online book by a professor of children's literature, whose introduction mentions "Fairy Tales and After"]
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