\begin{piece} {A Letter to the {\em Monthly} Editor} {by Marvin Knopp}\footnote[1]{Editor's note: This is in response to Steven Krantz's review of Omar Hijab's recent book, which appears in \em Amer. Math. Monthly, \rm 105, no. 7 (1998), 677-682. This response was sent to the {\em Monthly}'s editor Roger A. Horn.} Dear Professor Horn: Steven Krantz's egregiously wrong-headed review of Omar Hijab's recent book, ``Introduction to Calculus and Classical Analysis'' (ICCA) [Amer. Math. Monthly 105, no. 7 (1998), 677-682], begins with a description of the properties he feels a good mathematics textbook ought to have. At first appearing potentially useful, this turns laughable in light of Krantz's own inability to recognize a superb text (Hijab's) when he sees one. Having used Hijab's book in a year-long course for advanced undergraduates at Temple University during the academic year just past, I feel qualified to comment both upon the book and upon the reviewer's odd perception of it. ICCA is beautifully conceived and carefully executed. Understandably, therefore, I had a visceral reaction to Krantz's bald and unsupportable assertion that ``the entire text is sloppily written --- what I would think of as a first draft''. Not that Krantz makes no effort to support his assertion. Indeed, as evidence he adduces the author's \begin{itemize} \item[(i)] failure to construct the real number system $\bf R$, \item[(ii)] relegation of the proof of uniqueness of $\sup(S)$, \newline $S\subset\bf R$, to a brief footnote. \end{itemize} Now, I like a good construction of $\bf R$ as much as the next person, and in fact I discussed its importance with my class, including as well a brief sketch of the construction by way of Cauchy sequences of rationals. I omitted the details for the same reason that the author omits the construction: there is a good deal of serious analysis to be covered in the remainder of the book, especially in chapter 5, and the time is better spent in the later material. Concerning the uniqueness of $\sup(S)$ --- here I devoted enough time amplifying Hijab's terse (but logically complete) footnote to be certain that all members of the class understood the argument. The previous paragraph underscores a serious flaw in Krantz's perspective: he appears to disregard entirely the role of the instructor. He complains that the author ``echews $\epsilon$'s and $\delta$'s, \dots defines the integral of a function to be the area under the graph, almost completely eliminates uniform continuity and uniform convergence \dots'' and says little of Riemann sums and Riemann integrability. If there were no instructor to guide the learning this would present a problem (as would, indeed, any completely conventional treatment). But, my students did have an instructor, I did succeed in exposing them to standard approaches to the material along with Hijab's approach, and they clearly benefited from the multiplicity of viewpoints. Honesty requires the disclosure here that most of the credit for this pedagogical success belongs to ICCA. For instance, a simple theorem on page 23 (\S1.5) relates Hijab-style limits (upper and lower limits) and limits by way of $\epsilon$-$\delta$. Proving this theorem freed me to present results on limits either way. I made the most of this freedom, presenting proofs in whichever mode appeared simpler, and on occasion in both modes. The author's unusual, but carefully thought out approach to integration is even more liberating because of its radical simplification of a complex subject. Defining the integral as the area under the graph is a start towards stripping away the complexity, but this is not nearly as important as the fact (not noted by Krantz) that Hijab's notion of area is outer area, rather than the traditional Jordan content in ${\bf R}^2$. Initially, this was worrisome, my traditional mindset warning me that this was not going to work. To my surprise and delight, the classroom experience showed that nothing could be further from the truth. For Riemann integrable functions (hence for continuous functions) the ``Hijab integral'' coincides with the Riemann integral, and it includes the Cauchy-Riemann integral as well, at no additional charge. (In fact, for Lebesgue measurable functions, the ICCA integral coincides with the Lebesgue integral. However, measurable functions are neither needed nor discussed in the text.) Uniform convergence plays no part in the development, since Hijab presents instead a monotone convergence theorem valid for arbitrary nonnegative functions and a dominated convergence theorem for continuous functions (Yes --- you read that right!). Krantz closes his review of ICCA with praise for the final chapter 5, calling it an ``astonishing {\it tour de force}''. Here, at last, Krantz gets something right, but though he is certain he ``would refer to [ICCA] for ideas'' in his teaching, he remains doubtful he could ever teach from it. This assertion notwithstanding, I am certain Krantz could teach from the book and end up enamored of it, as I was from the outset. He would discover, as I did, that ICCA has much to teach, both about mathematics and how to write mathematics. He would find --- as I did when I assigned more than half of the ``astonishing'' (and difficult!) chapter 5 to my students to read on their own and to present in class --- that this book is eminently readable, even for ``tyros''. I urge Professor Krantz to teach from ICCA and then write the review he should have written in the first place. For his efforts, he will be a wiser mathematician, a happier teacher and a far better reviewer. Best of all --- he won't have to read any more of my annoying letters containing unwanted advice. Sincerely, \\ Marvin Knopp. \end{piece}