Fiction Club Kits

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Fiction Club Kits BookFiction Club Kits The Alchemist Beach Read Britt-Marie Was Here by Paulo Coelho by Emily Henry by Fredrik Backman The Alice Network The Bear and the Cave of Bones by Kate Quinn Nightingale by Anne Hillerman The All-Girl Filling by Katherine Arden The Cellist of Sarajevo Station’s Last Reunion Beartown by Steven Galloway by Fannie Flagg by Fredrik Backman A Certain Age All the Light We The Beekeeper’s by Beatriz Williams Cannot See Apprentice The Chicken Sisters by Anthony Doerr by Laurie R. King by K.J. Dell’Antonia The American Agent Before We Were Yours The Chilbury by Jacqueline Winspear by Lisa Wingate Ladies’ Choir The American Heiress Behold the Dreamers by Jennifer Ryan by Daisy Goodwin by Imbolo Mbue The Chocolate An American Marriage Bellewether Maker’s Wife by Tayari Jones by Susanna Kearsley by Karen Brooks Americanah Beloved Cilka’s Journey by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie by Toni Morrison by Heather Morris America’s First The Big Sky Circe Daughter by A.B. Guthrie, Jr. by Madeline Miller by Stephanie Dray and Laura Black River City of Girls Kamoie by S.M. Hulse by Elizabeth Gilbert And Then There The Bluest Eye Clock Dance Were None by Toni Morrison by Anne Tyler by Agatha Christie The Boat Runner The Clockmaker’s Animal Farm by Devin Murphy Daughter by George Orwell The Book of Unknown by Kate Morton Anything is Possible Americans Commonwealth by Elizabeth Strout by Cristina Henríquez by Ann Patchett As Bright as Heaven The Book Woman of Daisy Jones & the Six by Susan Meissner Troublesome Creek by Taylor Jenkins Reid The Atomic Weight by Kim Michele Richardson Daughter of Moloka’i of Love The Bookshop of by Alan Brennert by Elizabeth Church Yesterdays Dear Mrs. Bird by Amy Meyerson by A.J. Pearce 1 BookFiction Club Kits The Deep Frankenstein The Hired Girl by Rivers Solomon by Mary Shelley by Laura Amy Schlitz Deep River Fried Green Tomatoes The History of Bees by Karl Marlantes at the Whistle by Maja Lunde The Dinner List Stop Cafe Hollow Kingdom by Rebecca Serle by Fannie Flagg by Kira Jane Buxton Disappearing Earth The Friend Homegoing by Julia Phillips by Sigrid Nunez by Yaa Gyasi Do Not Say We A Gentleman in Moscow The House of Have Nothing by Amor Towles Broken Angels by Madeleine Thien The German Girl by Luis Alberto Urrea Drive Your Plow Over by Armando Lucas Correa The House of the Bones of the Dead The Girl Who Impossible Beauties by Olga Tokarczuk Wrote in Silk by Joseph Cassara Eleanor Oliphant is by Kelli Estes The Huntress Completely Fine Girls Burn Brighter by Kate Quinn by Gail Honeyman by Shobha Rao I was Anastasia Erotic Stories for The Girls with by Ariel Lawhon Punjabi Widows No Names If the Creek Don’t Rise by Balli Kaur Jaswal by Serena Burdick by Leah Weiss Everyone Brave The Glass Ocean In a Dark, Dark Wood is Forgiven by Beatriz Williams, Lauren by Ruth Ware by Chris Cleave Willig, and Karen White In the Distance Everything I Never Grand Union by Hernán Díaz Told You by Zadie Smith by Celeste Ng Interior Chinatown The Great Alone by Charles Yu Exit West by Kristin Hannah by Mohsin Hamid The Island of The Great Believers Sea Women A Fall of Marigolds by Rebecca Makkai by Lisa See by Susan Meissner The Handmaid’s Tale Jane Eyre Firefly Lane by Margaret Atwood by Charlotte Brontë by Kristin Hannah Happiness The Japanese Lover The Flight Girls by Aminatta Forna by Isabel Allende by Noelle Salazar The Hating Game by Sally Thorne 2 BookFiction Club Kits LaRose Manhattan Beach News of the World by Louise Erdrich by Jennifer Egan by Paulette Jiles Last Bus to Wisdom The Map of Salt Next Year in Havana by Ivan Doig and Stars by Chanel Cleeton Last Christmas in Paris by Jennifer Zeynab Joukhadar The Nickel Boys by Hazel Gaynor and The Masterpiece by Colson Whitehead Heather Webb by Fiona Davis The Night Circus The Last Days of Night Meet Me at the Museum by Erin Morgenstern by Graham Moore by Anne Youngson Night Road The Last Neanderthal The Mermaid’s by Kristin Hannah by Claire Cameron Daughter The Night Tiger The Leavers by Ann Claycomb by Yangsze Choo by Lisa Ko The Ministry of The Nightingale Less Utmost Happiness by Kristin Hannah by Arundhati Roy by Andrew Sean Greer Nine Perfect Strangers The Library at the Edge Miss Benson’s Beetle by Liane Moriarty by Rachel Joyce of the World Normal People by Felicity Hayes-McCoy The Missing American by Sally Rooney by Kwei Quartey The Lieutenant’s Nurse Nothing to See Here by Sara Ackerman The Mother-In-Law by Kevin Wilson by Sally Hepworth The Lighthouse Olive, Again Keeper’s Daughter Mr. Dickens and by Elizabeth Strout by Hazel Gaynor His Carol by Samantha Silva Once Upon a River Lilac Girls by Diane Setterfield by Martha Hall Kelly Mrs. Sherlock Holmes by Brad Ricca The Only Woman in Lincoln in the Bardo the Room by George Saunders Murder on the by Marie Benedict Little Fires Everywhere Orient Express by Agatha Christie The Other Windsor Girl by Celeste Ng by Georgie Blalock Lost Children Archive My Name is Anton by Catherine Ryan Hyde Our Homesick Songs by Valeria Luiselli by Emma Hooper The Lost Girls of Paris My Sister, the The Overstory by Pam Jenoff Serial Killer by Richard Powers by Oyinkan Braithwaite Loving Eleanor by Susan Wittig Albert 3 BookFiction Club Kits Pachinko Rules of Civility The Starless Sea by Min Jin Lee Amor Towles by Erin Morgenstern Parable of the Sower Saints for All A State of Freedom by Octavia E. Butler Occasions by Neel Mukherjee The Parking Lot by J. Courtney Sullivan Stay with Me Attendant Salvage the Bones by Ayọ̀bámi Adébáyọ̀ by Nafkote Tamirat by Jesmyn Ward Still Life A Place for Us The Scent Keeper by Louise Penny by Fatima Farheen Mirza by Erica Bauermeister The Story of The Prague Sonata Searching for Arthur Truluv by Bradford Morrow Sylvie Lee by Elizabeth Berg Pride and Prejudice by Jean Kwok Swing Time by Jane Austen The Secret of Clouds by Zadie Smith The Readers of Broken by Alyson Richman The Sympathizer Wheel Recommend Separation Anxiety by Viet Thanh Nguyen by Katarina Bivald by Laura Zigman The Tattooist Rebecca The Shadow King of Auschwitz by Daphne du Maurier by Maaza Mengiste by Heather Morris The Red Address Book She Would Be King The Tea Girl of by Sofia Lundberg by Wayétu Moore Hummingbird Lane Red at the Bone The Shortest Way Home by Lisa See by Jacqueline Woodson by Miriam Parker The Testaments Red Notice Shuggie Bain by Margaret Atwood by Bill Browder Douglas Stuart There There A Redbird Christmas Sing, Unburied, Sing by Tommy Orange by Fannie Flagg by Jesmyn Ward Things Fall Apart Resistance Women A Single Thread by Chinua Achebe by Jennifer Chiaverini by Tracy Chevalier This Is How It Always Is The Revisioners Small Great Things by Laurie Frankel by Margaret Wilkerson Sexton by Jodi Picoult This Tender Land A Rising Man The Snow Child by William Kent Krueger by Abir Mukherjee by Eowyn Ivey This Time Next Year The River Sourdough by Sophie Cousens by Peter Heller by Robin Sloan 4 BookFiction Club Kits Three Things Varina White Teeth about Elsie by Charles Frazier by Zadie Smith by Joanna Cannon Virgil Wander Winter Garden Tidelands by Leif Enger by Kristin Hannah by Philippa Gregory Warlight The Winter Soldier Tiny Imperfections by Michael Ondaajte by Daniel Mason by Alli Frank and Asha Youmans Washington Black The Woman in Today We Go Home by Esi Edugyan the Window by Kelli Estes The Water Dancer by A.J. Finn The Topeka School by Ta-Nahesi Coates The Woman on the by Ben Lerner We Must Be Brave Orient Express Transcription by Frances Liardet by Lindsay Jayne Ashford by Kate Atkinson We Were the The World That The Travelers Lucky Ones We Knew by Regina Porter by Georgia Hunter by Alice Hoffman Trust Exercise The Wedding Date Year of Wonders by Susan Choi by Jasmine Guillory by Geraldine Brooks Turtles All the Where the Dead Yellow Crocus Way Down Sit Talking by Laila Ibrahim by John Green by Brandon Hobson You Me Everything Under the Harrow Where’d You Go, by Catherine Isaac by Flynn Berry Bernadette The Underground by Maria Semple Railroad Whiskey When by Colson Whitehead We’re Dry Unsheltered by John Larison by Barbara Kingsolver White Chrysanthemum by Mary Lynn Bracht 5 BookNon-Fiction Club Kits Alex & Me The Chicken Who The Fire Next Time by Irene Pepperberg Saved Us by James Baldwin All Creatures Great by Kristin Jarvis Adams Fly Girls and Small Clementine by Keith O’Brien by James Herriot by Sonia Purnell The Girl With All You Can Ever Know Code Girls Seven Names by Nicole Chung by Liza Mundy by Hyeonseo Lee Astoria Code Name: Lise The Glass Castle by Peter Stark by Larry Loftis by Jeannette Walls Becoming The Color of Life The Good Neighbor by Michelle Obama by Cara Meredith by Maxwell King Being Mortal Dear America Hillbilly Elegy by Atul Gawande by Jose Antonio Vargas by J.D. Vance Between the World Desert Solitaire I’ll Push You and Me by Edward Abbey by Patrick Gray and by Ta-Nehisi Coates The Devil’s Highway Justin Skeesuck The Big Burn by Luis Alberto Urrea Just Mercy by Timothy Egan The Distance by Bryan Stevenson Black Like Me Between Us Killers of the by John Howard Griffin by Reyna Grande Flower Moon The Blood of Dreamland by David Grann Emmett Till by Sam Quinones Know My Name by Timothy B.
Recommended publications
  • Roy's Criticisms Towards the Caste System As Reflected
    ROY’S CRITICISMS TOWARDS THE CASTE SYSTEM AS REFLECTED THROUGH THE MAIN CHARACTERS AND THEIR CONFLICTS IN ARUNDHATI ROY’S THE GOD OF SMALL THINGS AN UNDERGRADUATE THESIS Presented as Partial Fulfillment of Requirements For the Degree of Sarjana Sastra In English Letters By IRINE CAHYANING TYAS Student Number: 044214019 ENGLISH LETTERS STUDY PROGRAMME DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH LETTERS FACULTY OF LETTERS SANATA DHARMA UNIVERSITY YOGYAKARTA 2009 ii iii God is in every tommorow, Therefore I life for today. Certain of finding at sunrise, Guidance and strength for the way. Power for each moment of weakness, Hope for each moment of pain, Comfort for every sorrow, Sunshine and joy after the rain... Anonymous iv I dedicate this thesis for My Beloved Parents, My Little Brothers, and Edo Baskoro who always support me in accomplishing this thesis. v vi vii Acknowledgements I would like to express my biggest gratitude to Jesus Christ and Virgin Mary for the blessings, strength and miracles They have been giving in my life, so that I am finally able to accomplish this undergraduate thesis. Thank God for answering my prayers. My gratitude is also directed to my advisor, Ni Luh Putu Rosiandani, S.S, M.Hum. I am also grateful for her guidance, patience, and especially for the time she has spent for reading and correcting my thesis. I also thank to my co- advisor Elisa Dwi Wardani S.S., M.Hum. for your guidance in finishing this thesis. I really appreciate all things she has done in process of writing my thesis Furthermore, I deeply express my gratitude to my beloved parents for their love, prayers, support, both financial and spiritual and good advices.
    [Show full text]
  • Stuartdybekprogram.Pdf
    1 Genius did not announce itself readily, or convincingly, in the Little Village of says. “I met every kind of person I was going to meet by the time I was 12.” the early 1950s, when the first vaguely artistic churnings were taking place in Stuart’s family lived on the first floor of the six-flat, which his father the mind of a young Stuart Dybek. As the young Stu's pencil plopped through endlessly repaired and upgraded, often with Stuart at his side. Stuart’s bedroom the surface scum into what local kids called the Insanitary Canal, he would have was decorated with the Picasso wallpaper he had requested, and from there he no idea he would someday draw comparisons to Ernest Hemingway, Sherwood peeked out at Kashka Mariska’s wreck of a house, replete with chickens and Anderson, Theodore Dreiser, Nelson Algren, James T. Farrell, Saul Bellow, dogs running all over the place. and just about every other master of “That kind of immersion early on kind of makes everything in later life the blue-collar, neighborhood-driven boring,” he says. “If you could survive it, it was kind of a gift that you didn’t growing story. Nor would the young Stu have even know you were getting.” even an inkling that his genius, as it Stuart, consciously or not, was being drawn into the world of stories. He in place were, was wrapped up right there, in recognizes that his Little Village had what Southern writers often refer to as by donald g. evans that mucky water, in the prison just a storytelling culture.
    [Show full text]
  • Lincoln in the Bardo
    Get hundreds more LitCharts at www.litcharts.com Lincoln in the Bardo INTRODUCTION RELATED LITERARY WORKS Lincoln in the Bardo borrows the term “Bardo” from The Bardo BRIEF BIOGRAPHY OF GEORGE SAUNDERS Thodol, a Tibetan text more widely known as The Tibetan Book of . Tibetan Buddhists use the word “Bardo” to refer to George Saunders was born in 1958 in Amarillo, Texas, but he the Dead grew up in Chicago. When he was eighteen, he attended the any transitional period, including life itself, since life is simply a Colorado School of Mines, where he graduated with a transitional state that takes place after a person’s birth and geophysical engineering degree in 1981. Upon graduation, he before their death. Written in the fourteenth century, The worked as a field geophysicist in the oil-fields of Sumatra, an Bardo Thodol is supposed to guide souls through the bardo that island in Southeast Asia. Perhaps because the closest town was exists between death and either reincarnation or the only accessible by helicopter, Saunders started reading attainment of nirvana. In addition, Lincoln in the Bardo voraciously while working in the oil-fields. A eary and a half sometimes resembles Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy, since later, he got sick after swimming in a feces-contaminated river, Saunders’s deceased characters deliver long monologues so he returned to the United States. During this time, he reminiscent of the self-interested speeches uttered by worked a number of hourly jobs before attending Syracuse condemned sinners in The Inferno. Taken together, these two University, where he earned his Master’s in Creative Writing.
    [Show full text]
  • A Stylistic Approach to the God of Small Things Written by Arundhati Roy
    Lingnan University Digital Commons @ Lingnan University Theses & Dissertations Department of English 2007 A stylistic approach to the God of Small Things written by Arundhati Roy Wing Yi, Monica CHAN Follow this and additional works at: https://commons.ln.edu.hk/eng_etd Part of the English Language and Literature Commons Recommended Citation Chan, W. Y. M. (2007). A stylistic approach to the God of Small Things written by Arundhati Roy (Master's thesis, Lingnan University, Hong Kong). Retrieved from http://dx.doi.org/10.14793/eng_etd.2 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Department of English at Digital Commons @ Lingnan University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses & Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Lingnan University. Terms of Use The copyright of this thesis is owned by its author. Any reproduction, adaptation, distribution or dissemination of this thesis without express authorization is strictly prohibited. All rights reserved. A STYLISTIC APPROACH TO THE GOD OF SMALL THINGS WRITTEN BY ARUNDHATI ROY CHAN WING YI MONICA MPHIL LINGNAN UNIVERSITY 2007 A STYLISTIC APPROACH TO THE GOD OF SMALL THINGS WRITTEN BY ARUNDHATI ROY by CHAN Wing Yi Monica A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Philosophy in English Lingnan University 2007 ABSTRACT A Stylistic Approach to The God of Small Things written by Arundhati Roy by CHAN Wing Yi Monica Master of Philosophy This thesis presents a creative-analytical hybrid production in relation to the stylistic distinctiveness in The God of Small Things, the debut novel of Arundhati Roy.
    [Show full text]
  • Indiebestsellers
    Indie Bestsellers Fiction Week of 03.31.21 HARDCOVER PAPERBACK 1. Klara and the Sun 1. The Song of Achilles Kazuo Ishiguro, Knopf, $28 Madeline Miller, Ecco, $16.99 2. The Midnight Library 2. Circe Matt Haig, Viking, $26 Madeline Miller, Back Bay, $16.99 3. The Four Winds 3. The Rose Code Kristin Hannah, St. Martin’s, $28.99 Kate Quinn, Morrow, $17.99 ★ 4. The Consequences of Fear 4. The Dutch House Jacqueline Winspear, Harper, $27.99 Ann Patchett, Harper Perennial, $17 5. The Vanishing Half 5. Later Brit Bennett, Riverhead Books, $27 Stephen King, Hard Case Crime, $14.95 6. The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue ★ 6. The Book of Longings V.E. Schwab, Tor, $26.99 Sue Monk Kidd, Penguin, $17 7. Hamnet 7. Deacon King Kong Maggie O’Farrell, Knopf, $26.95 James McBride, Riverhead Books, $17 8. The Committed 8. Interior Chinatown Viet Thanh Nguyen, Grove Press, $27 Charles Yu, Vintage, $16 9. The Lost Apothecary 9. The Overstory Sarah Penner, Park Row, $27.99 Richard Powers, Norton, $18.95 10. We Begin at the End 10. The Sympathizer Chris Whitaker, Holt, $27.99 Viet Thanh Nguyen, Grove Press, $17 11. The Paris Library ★ 11. The Night Watchman Janet Skeslien Charles, Atria, $28 Louise Erdrich, Harper Perennial, $18 12. Anxious People 12. The House in the Cerulean Sea Fredrik Backman, Atria, $28 TJ Klune, Tor, $18.99 13. The Sanatorium 13. The Glass Hotel Sarah Pearse, Pamela Dorman Books, $27 Emily St. John Mandel, Vintage, $16.95 ★ 14. Eternal 14. Parable of the Sower Lisa Scottoline, Putnam, $28 Octavia E.
    [Show full text]
  • [PDF] Lincoln in the Bardo: a Novel George Saunders
    [PDF] Lincoln In The Bardo: A Novel George Saunders - book free Lincoln In The Bardo: A Novel by George Saunders Download, Free Download Lincoln In The Bardo: A Novel Ebooks George Saunders, Lincoln In The Bardo: A Novel Full Collection, PDF Lincoln In The Bardo: A Novel Free Download, free online Lincoln In The Bardo: A Novel, online free Lincoln In The Bardo: A Novel, Download Online Lincoln In The Bardo: A Novel Book, pdf free download Lincoln In The Bardo: A Novel, read online free Lincoln In The Bardo: A Novel, Lincoln In The Bardo: A Novel George Saunders pdf, by George Saunders Lincoln In The Bardo: A Novel, by George Saunders pdf Lincoln In The Bardo: A Novel, Download Online Lincoln In The Bardo: A Novel Book, Pdf Books Lincoln In The Bardo: A Novel, Read Lincoln In The Bardo: A Novel Books Online Free, Lincoln In The Bardo: A Novel Ebooks Free, Lincoln In The Bardo: A Novel Popular Download, Lincoln In The Bardo: A Novel Read Download, Lincoln In The Bardo: A Novel Free PDF Download, Lincoln In The Bardo: A Novel Free PDF Online, DOWNLOAD CLICK HERE This was quite a few of my favorite stories. The bottom line a bad rapture is written in a way that makes you feel like you should be treated with love as to how we are it. After a girl is blessed to kill her in summer. I 'm now reading the scriptures because it 's spoilers again having finish the book i am unfair to review it.
    [Show full text]
  • English Reading List 2021 - 2022 Oib
    ENGLISH READING LIST 2021 - 2022 OIB NEW BOOKS • Such a Fun Age, Kiley Read • Hamnet, Maggie O’Farrell • I Am Not Your Baby Mama, Candice Brathwaite • The Five, Hallie Rubenhold • Sweet Sorrow, David Nicholls • Shuggie Bain, Douglas Stuart • Home Going, Yaa Gyasi • Airhead, Emily Maitliss • Americanah, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichi • Girl, Woman, Other, Bernadine Evaristo • The Power, Naomi Alderman • Why I’m No Longer Talking To White People About Race, Reni Eddo-Lodge MODERN CLASSICS/FICTION • The Catcher in the Rye, JD Salinger • Birdsong/Charlotte Gray, Sebastian Faulks • A Prayer for Owen Meany/The World According to Garp, John Irving • When We Were Orphans/The Remains of the Day/Never Let Me Go, Kazuo Ishiguro • A Kestrel for a Knave, Barry Hines • Lord of the Flies, William Golding • The Great Gatsby, F.Scott Fitzgerald • The Heart is a Lonely Hunter, Carson McCullers • The Pearl/East of Eden/The Grapes of Wrath/The Long Valley, John Steinbeck • Rebecca/Jamaica Inn, Daphne Du Maurier • One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest, Ken Kesey • The Book Thief, Markus Zusak • The Shock of the Fall, Markus Zusak • White Teeth, Zadie Smith • Brighton Rock, Graham Greene • Gilead, Marilynne Robinson Lycée Français Charles de Gaulle 35 Cromwell Road, London SW7 2DG Tél : +44 (0)20 7584 6322 www.lyceefrancais.org.uk • Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha, Roddy Doyle • The Kite Runner, Khaled Hosseini • A Fine Balance, Rohinton Mistry • Vile Bodies/Brideshead Revisited/Decline and Fall, Evelyn Waugh • On the Road, Jack Kerouac • The God of Small Things, Arundhati Roy •
    [Show full text]
  • The Theme of Transgressing Social Boundaries in Arundhati Roy's The
    id14791789 pdfMachine by Broadgun Software - a great PDF writer! - a great PDF creator! - http://www.pdfmachine.com http://www.broadgun.com Södertörns University College C-essay English Department Spring 2005 Supervisor: Dr. Claire Hogarth Crossing Lines: The Theme of Transgressing Social Boundaries in Arundhati Roy’s The God of Small Things Naz Shakely Table of Contents Introduction 1 Ammu Transgressing Boundaries 3 Velutha Transgressing Boundaries 6 Ammu and Velutha Breaking the Love Laws 8 The Love Laws 9 The Gender Issue 10 Punishments 12 Conclusion 14 Works Cited 17 id14803105 pdfMachine by Broadgun Software - a great PDF writer! - a great PDF creator! - http://www.pdfmachine.com http://www.broadgun.com 1 Introduction Everywhere we turn, we come across moral boundaries that we at least think we are not supposed to cross, but that we do cross nonetheless. “As ye sow, ye shall reap” is a proverb we all have heard sometime (Roy 31). But is it really true? Do we get what we deserve? And if so, who decides what is right and what is wrong? Who decides what we should and should not be punished for? In Arundhati Roy’s The God of Small Things, most of the characters cross moral boundaries. Eventually, they all get punished for doing so. In this novel, Roy presents two kinds of morality. One of them is social morality, which can be defined as what a group thinks is good and right or the way one should behave. The other one is individual morality – what oneself thinks is the right way to act.
    [Show full text]
  • The Failure of Sympathy in the Recent Works of J.M. Coetzee
    The failure of sympathy in the recent works of JM Coetzee Warwick Ian Shapcott A thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Arts (Research) School of English University of New South Wales July 2006 ORIGINALITY STATEMENT 'I hereby declare that this submission is my own work and to the best of my knowledge it contains no materials previously published or written by another person, or substantial proportions of material which have been accepted for the award of any other degree or diploma at UNSW or any other educational institution, except where due acknowledgement is made in the thesis. Any contribution made to the research by others, with whom I have worked at UNSW or elsewhere, is explicitly acknowledged in the thesis. I also declare that the intellectual content of this thesis is the product of my own work, except to the extent that assistance from others in the project's design and conception or in style, presentation and linguistic expression is acknowledged.' Signed ......... Date ........................ ..~~.l.~.l~.7 ......................... COPYRIGHT STATEMENT 'I hereby grant the University of New South Wales or its agents the right to archive and to make available my thesis or dissertation in whole or part in the University libraries in all forms of media, now or here after known, subject to the provisions of the Copyright Act 1968. I retain all proprietary rights, such as patent rights. I also retain the right to use in future works (such as articles or books) all or part of this thesis or dissertation. I also authorise University Microfilms to use the 350 word abstract of my thesis in Dissertation Abstract International (this is applicable to doctoral theses only).
    [Show full text]
  • Addition to Summer Letter
    May 2020 Dear Student, You are enrolled in Advanced Placement English Literature and Composition for the coming school year. Bowling Green High School has offered this course since 1983. I thought that I would tell you a little bit about the course and what will be expected of you. Please share this letter with your parents or guardians. A.P. Literature and Composition is a year-long class that is taught on a college freshman level. This means that we will read college level texts—often from college anthologies—and we will deal with other materials generally taught in college. You should be advised that some of these texts are sophisticated and contain mature themes and/or advanced levels of difficulty. In this class we will concentrate on refining reading, writing, and critical analysis skills, as well as personal reactions to literature. A.P. Literature is not a survey course or a history of literature course so instead of studying English and world literature chronologically, we will be studying a mix of classic and contemporary pieces of fiction from all eras and from diverse cultures. This gives us an opportunity to develop more than a superficial understanding of literary works and their ideas. Writing is at the heart of this A.P. course, so you will write often in journals, in both personal and researched essays, and in creative responses. You will need to revise your writing. I have found that even good students—like you—need to refine, mature, and improve their writing skills. You will have to work diligently at revising major essays.
    [Show full text]
  • An Overview of the New Testament in Eight Weeks Arden C. Autry, Phd
    An Overview of the New Testament in Eight Weeks Arden C. Autry, PhD Introduction An eight-week overview cannot cover everything in the New Testament. Instead we will focus on some of the key events and some of the most important contributions by individual NT writers. With that as our aim we hope to gain a sense of the New Testament’s unity, diversity, and theological development. The approach of this series will be partly chronological, but only in a general way. Obviously the events of the Gospels precede the events of Acts, and the events in Acts partially overlap with the historical contexts for some of Paul’s Epistles. But the earliest Epistle of Paul was almost certainly written before the first Gospel was written, and the Book of James was probably written before Paul’s earliest. With a strict chronological order being out of the question for such a series, the approach taken will be somewhat canonical (taking the books in the order found in the Bible). So, for example, we will treat Matthew before Mark, even though most NT scholars (including the author of this series) believe Mark was written before Matthew. When we get to the Epistles of Paul in Lessons 5-6, the canonical approach will not serve as well. The canonical order of Paul’s Epistles goes generally from longest to shortest, not from earliest to latest (e.g., the Thessalonian letters were written years before Romans). To attempt a chronological approach, however, would involve too much repetition and historical arguments for the chosen order.
    [Show full text]
  • Services for Book Groups the Alice Network by Kate Quinn (Fiction) the Nightingale Substantial Excerpt and Multiple Reviews of Each One
    The following kits are available in large print versions making Check out these Websites for Book Group Ideas reading easier and more comfortable. Bookbrowse: www.bookbrowse.com Recommends only the most exceptional current books and provides a Services for Book Groups The Alice Network by Kate Quinn (Fiction) The Nightingale substantial excerpt and multiple reviews of each one. All Adults Here by Emma Straub (Fiction) by Kristin Hannah (Fiction) Orphan Train Bookmarks Magazine: www.bookmarksmagazine.com An American Marriage Includes lists of the most reviewed titles to see what hot books are currently by Tayari Jones (Fiction) by Christina Baker Kline (Fiction) attracting reviewers’ attention. Ask Again, Yes Paris by the Book by Mary Beth Keane (Fiction) by Liam Callanan (Fiction) Goodreads: www.goodreads.com Redhead by the Side of the Road Big Little Lies by Liane Moriarty (Fiction) This site is the largest social network for readers in the world. Goodreads by Anne Tyler (Fiction) members recommend books, compare what they are reading, keep track of The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek Saving Grace by Jane Green (Fiction) what they've read and would like to read, form book clubs and much more. by Kim Michele Richardson (Fiction) The Second Mrs. Hockaday The Boston Girl by Anita Diamant (Fiction) I Love Libraries: ilovelibraries.org by Susan Rivers (Fiction) Camino Winds by John Grisham (Fiction) I Love Libraries is an initiative of the American Library Association (ALA), created Small Great Things to spread the world about the value of today's libraries. The Chilbury Ladies’ Choir by Jodi Picoult (Fiction) by Jennifer Ryan (Fiction) A Spool of Blue Thread LibraryThing: www.librarything.com China Dolls by Lisa See (Fiction) by Anne Tyler (Fiction) Helps you catalog your own books and connects people with the same books, comes up with suggestions for what to read next, and more.
    [Show full text]