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Reading Nonfiction: GED Test Prep (page 2)

By LearningExpress Editors
LearningExpress, LLC

Autobiography and Memoir

In an autobiography or memoir, the author will—very subjectively, of course—tell the story of his or her life. The difference between autobiographies and memoirs is that memoirs tend to be less comprehensive and more exploratory—they will cover less ground and spend more time examining the impact of people and events. Authors may write to clarify an experience, teach a lesson, or make a statement about a historical event or social movement. As you read an autobiography or memoir, look for what the author feels has shaped him. Why has he chosen to relate these particular events; describe these particular people?

For example, here is a brief excerpt from Frank McCourt's best-selling 1996 memoir, Angela's Ashes:

Next day we rode to the hospital in a carriage with a horse. They put Oliver in a white box that came with us in the carriage and we took him to the graveyard. They put the white box into a hole in the ground and covered it with earth. My mother and Aunt Aggie cried, Grandma looked angry, Dad, Uncle Pa Keating, and Uncle Pat Sheehan looked sad but did not cry and I thought that if you're a man you can cry only when you have the black stuff that is called the pint.

I did not like the jackdaws that perched on trees and gravestones and I did not want to leave Oliver with them. I threw a rock at a jackdaw that waddled over toward Oliver's grave. Dad said I shouldn't throw rocks at jackdaws, they might be somebody's soul. I didn't know what a soul was but I didn't ask him because I didn't care. Oliver was dead and I hated jackdaws. I'd be a man someday and I'd come back with a bag of rocks and I'd leave the graveyard littered with dead jackdaws.

Commentary on the Arts

The purpose of commentary is to illuminate or explain other works of literature and art. These texts review and analyze a work of art (performance art, visual art, and literature) and generally have two goals: 1) to help us understand the work of art and 2) to evaluate its success or value. A book review, for example, will typically offer some background on the author, summarize the basic plot of the story, and describe the main characters and their chief conflicts. It will also point out what makes the novel good (e.g., the characters are especially endearing, the plot has surprising twists and turns, the descriptions are particularly lush, the structure is very unique) or bad (e.g., the plot is trite, the characters are flat and unbelievable, the writing is clumsy, the chapters are disorganized). Thus, commentary can help you determine whether or not a work of art is something you should experience, and if you do experience it, the commentary can help you make more sense of your experience.

The commentary on the GED Language Arts, Reading Exam can be of any sort, including reviews of books, movies, concerts/musical performances, dance productions, musicals, television shows, plays, paintings, sculptures, photography, or multimedia arts. But you are most likely to see commentary on a visual art piece or experience.

When you read commentary, one of the most important skills to have is the ability to distinguish between fact and opinion. While commentators do deal with facts, commentary is by nature highly subjective; they are sharing their personal reactions to a work of art. A good commentator will always explain why he or she feels the way he or she does about a work of art. For example, a movie critic might praise a film because the story was original and moving, the actors convincing, and the special effects stunning.

Remember, however, that the reviewer's feelings about the film are opinions, no matter how well the author might defend them. There are many non-debatable facts about a work of art such as a film, including when it was made, how long it took to make, who made it, how much it cost, the events in the plot, how the special effects were created, etc. But the reviewer's judgment of these facts is a matter of debate, and therefore a matter of opinion. You might find the story in a movie interesting while your friend finds it boring.

As you read commentary, pay attention to word choice. Even in sentences that seem to express facts, commentators can express their opinion. For example, look at the following sentences. They have the same meaning but convey different attitudes:

      Raquel Ramirez plays the role of Ophelia.
      Raquel Ramirez shines in the role of Ophelia.
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