I’m guessing anyone in their 40’s or 50’s relied on these things heavily in school to get through that Romeo and Juliet book report that they didn’t read. (Don’t ask me how I know).
Just wondering with this recent invention of something the kids call the internet, whether or not Cliff (or his heirs) are under some freeway overpass panhandling for coins these days.
Why bookstores? That was bad marketing, even back then. To make sales, you go where your customers are.
Kids who buy Cliffnotes don’t buy books, and don’t ask their parents to take them to the bookstore.
I remember CliffNotes at drug stores.
They were on rotating racks (like greeting cards), next to the magazines and comics.
You could ride your bike to the drug store at 6p.m on Sunday evening, when all the other stores were closed , and get the CliffNotes in time for Monday morning’s test.
There’s also watching the movie version, but you have to be careful. I remember an 8th-grade classmate giving an oral report on Pygmalion but it was obvious that she’d seen and was describing scenes from My Fair Lady not in Shaw’s play.
I was in school in the 1960s and 1970s and while remember seeing them in the store, I never used them, and I did not know anyone who did. Never bought one, and I did not know anyone who did or at least admitted to it. They just weren’t popular among the students in my West Texas town. I do remember seeing them for sale in the bookstores, and I think I looked through a couple, but I remember thinking just reading the damned book would take about as much effort as reading the Cliffs Notes.
I did that when I was supposed to read Tess of the d’Urbervilles. I could not get through that novel so instead I watched the movie version starring Nastassja Kinski (and this was back in the VHS days).
I remember, way back when I was working at my college newspaper, being assigned to do a phone interview with Jim Carroll, author of The Basketball Diaries, who was scheduled to come to campus in order to do a reading. I hadn’t actually read the book, so I watched the movie instead and asked him how it differed from the book. I thought my article turned out fairly well.
I disagree. I recall using them in college. I love to read but, like any reader, I love to read what interests me, not necessarily what some English lit professor wants me to read.
I recall them being for sale in the college bookstore, which makes sense from a marketing viewpoint but it does seem odd that the college would allow it.
They sold them at my school too, I suppose they are akin to calculators in the same respect if one was concerned with cheating. This being said, I did use them heavily in High School, and I loved to read even then, but not the crap prescribed to me (some Tolstoy too). Sorry for anyone here who likes it, but I cannot stand Leo Tolstoy stuff, so damned boring, always a meaningless junk plot then a sudden “tragedy”. “The Overcoat” 'nuff said, I was so thankful for cliffsnotes.
The bookstore doesn’t care what the Cliffnotes are used for as long as they are paid for. From the colleges’ perspective, the Cliffnotes are supposedly used in conjunction with actually reading the book. For the not-particularly-good with literature (think borderline autistic engineering majors) and foreign students not familiar with American culture, this can be the case. Some university libraries have Cliffnotes in their collections (or frequently on reserve because of high demand) with this idea in mind.