Library/PT 101/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Critics disagree about P. D. James: some say her crime novels are serious literature because of deep characters and thoughtful ideas, while others call her pretentious and complain she ignores the detective puzzle. The passage says James can write very well and creates vivid scenes, but those long descriptions often slow the plot and make it hard to see how the detective figures things out. Lately she seems to be pushing against crime‑story rules by leaving answers unclear and spreading blame among people, which suggests she may be moving toward ordinary (mainstream) novels instead of traditional mysteries.

Logic Breakdown

Locate the passage's "familiar" attitude — that enjoyable novels are seen as lowbrow and true literature must be somewhat dull — and choose the option that restates that idea (literature should demand, not merely divert).

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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8.

Which one of the following quotations about literature best exemplifies the "familiar" attitude mentioned in the second sentence of the passage?

Correct Answer
C
Option C is correct because it directly restates the passage's "familiar" attitude: the passage says, "perhaps underlying the debate is that familiar, false opposition set up between different kinds of fiction, according to which enjoyable novels are held to be somehow slightly lowbrow, and a novel is not considered true literature unless it is a tiny bit dull." (first paragraph, second sentence). C's claim that "A truly great work of literature should place demands upon its readers, rather than divert them" captures the same idea (demanding = not merely diverting = "a tiny bit dull").
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