“By bringing his eminent scholarship to bear in doses measured for the common reader or occasional student, Professor Foster has done us all a generous turn. The trained eye, the tuned ear, the intellect possesed of simple cyphers brings the literary arts alive. For those who’ve ever wondered what Dr. Williams saw in a red wheel barrow glazed with rain water—here is an essential text.” — Thomas Lynch, author of The Undertaking“I know of no other book that so vividly conveys what it’s like to study with a great literature professor. In a work that is both down-to-earth and rich in insight, Thomas Foster goes far towards breaking down the wall that has long divided the academic and the common reader.” — James Shapiro, Columbia University, author of Shakespeare and the Jews“A smart, accessible, and thoroughly satisfying examination of what it means to read a work of literature. Guess what? It isn’t all that hard, not when you have a knowledgeable guide to show the way. Dante had his Virgil; for everyone else, there is Thomas Foster.” — Nicholas A. Basbanes, author of A Gentle Madness, Patience & Fortitude, and Among the Gently Mad“Tom Foster’s casual, unpretentious, yet brilliant How To Read Literature Like a Professor is a painless introduction to crucial – and sophisticated—skills of reading. What a sense of the comic! What a knowledge of modern literature! What good stories!” — Linda Wagner-Martin, UNC-Chapel Hill, author of Sylvia Plath: A Life