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The Unforgettable, Heartbreaking Story of the Unlikely Friendship Between A
Advanced Placement English Literature and Composition: Summer Reading In keeping with the philosophy that each individual should be trained to the fullest realization of his/her capacities, the Advanced Placement English program enables interested students to realize their potential. AP Literature and Composition is designed to give the student experience in reading closely, thinking precisely, and writing analytically. Not only will we analyze craft and develop an appreciation of the beauty of language (celebrating how authors use words to create art), we will also use literature as a tool to analyze human nature and gain a deeper understanding of the world. We may not always have the opportunity to travel and discover exciting new places, and there are times in life when we struggle to find a reflection of ourselves in another, but literature allows us to connect, to discover, and to grow. To begin this exciting quest, I would like you to read The Kite Runner and a book of choice. I believe in the importance of creating both shared literary experiences and also providing choice, in seeking a curriculum that is meaningful, challenging, and relevant. It is my hope that we will push each other to reach our potential while being supportive and compassionate. I look forward to reading the many stories you will share and write in our course. I look forward to hearing your voice. Thank you for joining our AP Literature learning community. The Kite Runner – Khaled Hosseini “The unforgettable, heartbreaking story of the unlikely friendship between a wealthy boy and the son of his father’s servant, caught in the tragic sweep of history, The Kite Runner transports readers to Afghanistan at a tense and crucial moment of change and destruction. -
1 “AMERICA on a SHELF” COLLECTION 101 American
“AMERICA ON A SHELF” COLLECTION 101 American Customs : Understanding Language and Culture Through Common Practices [Paperback] Harry Collis (Author) Publisher: McGraw-Hill; 1 edition (October 1, 1999) The Accidental Tourist: A Novel By Anne Tyler (Ballantine Reader's Circle) Across The River and Into the Trees Ernest Hemingway; Paperback The Adventures of Augie March (Penguin Classics) Saul Bellow; Paperback After This by Alice McDermott (Farrar, Straus and Giroux) Age of Innocence By Edith Wharton Al Capone and His American Boys: Memoirs of a Mobster's Wife William J. Helmer (Editor) Publisher: Indiana University Press (July 7, 2011) America The Story of Us: An Illustrated History [Paperback] Kevin Baker (Author), Prof. Gail Buckland (Photographer), Barack Obama (Introduction) Publisher: History (September 21, 2010) American Civilization: An Introduction [Paperback] David C. Mauk (Author), John Oakland (Author) Publisher: Routledge; 5 edition (August 16, 2009) The American Dream: A Short History of an Idea that Shaped a Nation [Paperback] Jim Cullen (Author) Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA (June 14, 2004) American English: Dialects and Variation (Language in Society) [Paperback] Walt Wolfram (Author) Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell; 2nd Edition edition (September 12, 2005) American Values - Opposing Viewpoints Series Author David M. Haugen Publisher: Greenhaven (November 7, 2008) 1 American Ways: A Cultural Guide to the United States Gary Althen (Author) Publisher: Nicholas Brealey Publishing; 3 edition (February 16, 2011) American -
Honors/Advanced Placement English III Reading List 2008-2009
Honors/Advanced Placement English III Summer Reading List 2021 English III (H) and (AP): Students are required to take Accelerated Reader tests on assigned and choice novels. • Novel: Catcher in the Rye by J. D. Salinger • Film: Dead Poets’ Society (1989—PG) • Also: Students will read one work from the list provided below. This selection will feed into a major research project to be completed during the junior year. Students who read more than one book from this list can use these points toward an extra AR grade for summer/1st quarter and will also ease their reading requirements during the first quarter of junior year. Note: Any points over 15 earned on this choice book will count toward your first-quarter bonus AR grade. Points earned from The Catcher in the Rye do not count toward a bonus grade. Have questions? Contact me: [email protected] Important to note: I strongly encourage you to annotate your books as you read. Suggestions for why and how are provided in the great article available through this link: https://slowreads.com/2008/04/18/how-to-mark-a-book/ Choose from these books: American Male Writers The Big Sleep / Raymond Chandler: a dark and cynical mystery/detective story with a plot that reveals how truly twisted the human heart is; also presents us with a heroic detective who shows that chivalry is not completely dead in modern society. AR: 15 The Call of the Wild /Jack London: The story, filled with action and adventure, presents a strangely compelling world - the world of the Arctic Circle at the beginning of the 20th century. -
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. -
A Too-Brief, Incomplete, Unalphabetized List of Must-Read
A Too-Brief, Incomplete, Unalphabetized List of Must-Read that You Might Not Have Been Taught or Otherwise Made to Read Novels and Short Story Collections Written in the 20th and 21st Centuries Saul Bellow: Henderson the Rain King, Humboldt’s Gift, The Adventures of Augie March, Herzog Grace Paley: Collected Stories Flannery O’Conner: Collected Stories (especially the story from A Good Man is Hard to Find) Evan Connell: Mrs. Bridge, Mr. Bridge Vladimir Nabokov: Lolita, Pale Fire Ralph Ellison: Invisible Man Mary McCarthy: The Group, The Company She Keeps Nathanael West: Miss Lonelyhearts, The Day of the Locust Eudora Welty: Collected Stories Tess Slesinger: The Unpossessed Dagoberto Gilb: The Last Known Residence of Mickey Acuna Don DeLillo: End Zone, White Noise, Underworld Cormac McCarthy: Suttree, All the Pretty Horses, The Road, Blood Meridian Muriel Spark: The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, Memento Mori, The Comforters, Aiding and Abetting Kazuo Ishiguro: Never Let Me Go, The Unconsoled Zora Neale Hurston: Their Eyes Were Watching God Donald Barthelme: Sixty Stories, Forty Stories Thomas Pynchon: V, Crying of Lot 49, Gravity’s Rainbow Padgett Powell: Edisto, Edisto Revisited, Aliens of Affection Barry Hannah: Airships Steven Millhauser: Edwin Mullhouse, Martin Dressler Colson Whitehead, The Intuitionist Heidi Julavits: The Effects of Looking Backwards John Cheever: The Stories of John Cheever, The Wapshot Chronicle Judy Budnitz: Nice Big American Baby, Flying Leap Lee K. Abbott: Love is the Crooked Thing Angela Carter: The Company of -
100 Best Novels
100 Best Novels ULYSSES by James Joyce TENDER IS THE NIGHT by F. Scott Fitzgerald THE GREAT GATSBY by F. Scott Fitzgerald THE STUDS LONIGAN TRILOGY by James T. Farrell A PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNG MAN by James THE GOOD SOLDIER by Ford Madox Ford Joyce ANIMAL FARM by George Orwell LOLITA by Vladimir Nabokov THE GOLDEN BOWL by Henry James BRAVE NEW WORLD by Aldous Huxley SISTER CARRIE by Theodore Dreiser THE SOUND AND THE FURY by William Faulkner A HANDFUL OF DUST by Evelyn Waugh CATCH-22 by Joseph Heller AS I LAY DYING by William Faulkner DARKNESS AT NOON by Arthur Koestler ALL THE KING’S MEN by Robert Penn Warren SONS AND LOVERS by D.H. Lawrence THE BRIDGE OF SAN LUIS REY by Thornton Wilder THE GRAPES OF WRATH by John Steinbeck HOWARDS END by E.M. Forster UNDER THE VOLCANO by Malcolm Lowry GO TELL IT ON THE MOUNTAIN by James Baldwin THE WAY OF ALL FLESH by Samuel Butler THE HEART OF THE MATTER by Graham Greene 1984 by George Orwell LORD OF THE FLIES by William Golding I, CLAUDIUS by Robert Graves DELIVERANCE by James Dickey TO THE LIGHTHOUSE by Virginia Woolf A DANCE TO THE MUSIC OF TIME (series) by Anthony AN AMERICAN TRAGEDY by Theodore Dreiser Powell THE HEART IS A LONELY HUNTER by Carson McCullers POINT COUNTER POINT by Aldous Huxley SLAUGHTERHOUSE-FIVE by Kurt Vonnegut THE SUN ALSO RISES by Ernest Hemingway INVISIBLE MAN by Ralph Ellison THE SECRET AGENT by Joseph Conrad NATIVE SON by Richard Wright NOSTROMO by Joseph Conrad HENDERSON THE RAIN KING by Saul Bellow THE RAINBOW by D.H. -
The Pulitzer Prize for Fiction Honors a Distinguished Work of Fiction by an American Author, Preferably Dealing with American Life
Pulitzer Prize Winners Named after Hungarian newspaper publisher Joseph Pulitzer, the Pulitzer Prize for fiction honors a distinguished work of fiction by an American author, preferably dealing with American life. Chosen from a selection of 800 titles by five letter juries since 1918, the award has become one of the most prestigious awards in America for fiction. Holdings found in the library are featured in red. 2017 The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead 2016 The Sympathizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen 2015 All the Light we Cannot See by Anthony Doerr 2014 The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt 2013: The Orphan Master’s Son by Adam Johnson 2012: No prize (no majority vote reached) 2011: A visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan 2010:Tinkers by Paul Harding 2009:Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout 2008:The Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz 2007:The Road by Cormac McCarthy 2006:March by Geraldine Brooks 2005 Gilead: A Novel, by Marilynne Robinson 2004 The Known World by Edward Jones 2003 Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides 2002 Empire Falls by Richard Russo 2001 The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay by Michael Chabon 2000 Interpreter of Maladies by Jhumpa Lahiri 1999 The Hours by Michael Cunningham 1998 American Pastoral by Philip Roth 1997 Martin Dressler: The Tale of an American Dreamer by Stephan Milhauser 1996 Independence Day by Richard Ford 1995 The Stone Diaries by Carol Shields 1994 The Shipping News by E. Anne Proulx 1993 A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain by Robert Olen Butler 1992 A Thousand Acres by Jane Smiley -
A Study of Psychological Reverberations in Walker Percy's
Mukt Shabd Journal ISSN NO : 2347-3150 From Inertia to Dynamism: A Study of Psychological Reverberations in Walker Percy’s The Moviegoer 1A.Susai Devanesan Ph.D. Research Scholar, Department of English, Nehru Memorial College, Affiliated to Bharathidasan University, Tiruchirappalli, Tamil Nadu, India *2Dr. K. T. Tamilmani Dean, Academic Affairs and Head & Associate Professor, Department of English, Nehru Memorial College, Affiliated to Bharathidasan University, Tiruchirappalli, Tamil Nadu, India ABSTRACT Human life is a priceless opportunity for growth, a spiritual journey of Redemption. Despite the Eden’s material flavor, the present-day man is estranged in constant despair and deep-seated ambivalence of quandary. People often don’t really look for truth but are dogmatic about what they believe is true. The different forms of mental illness, such as Binx Bolling’s urbane melancholy in Walker Percy’s The Moviegoer, are essentially placed into the existential phenomenon of human situations. Percy, as a physician of the soul, posits medicine to this disquietude of modern man. Reflecting upon the disoriented and unsatisfied past, the protagonist, Binx Bolling tries to reconstruct the present reality making it more meaningful. Though not apparently, inspired by Catholicism, Percy in The Moviegoer propels advocacy against the patrimonial melancholy inherited and current spiritual scrambles. Every individual must discern who he is and what he is here for, transcending the wayfaring and shattering passivity and everydayness. Such authentic self-awareness gives vent for true humanism. When the authentic self is trudging from inertia to dynamism, there is a new beginning. This article tries to explore the transition of Binx Bolling from the past-ridden estrangement and passivity to authentic and meaningful existence. -
Pulitzer Prize
1946: no award given 1945: A Bell for Adano by John Hersey 1944: Journey in the Dark by Martin Flavin 1943: Dragon's Teeth by Upton Sinclair Pulitzer 1942: In This Our Life by Ellen Glasgow 1941: no award given 1940: The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck 1939: The Yearling by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings Prize-Winning 1938: The Late George Apley by John Phillips Marquand 1937: Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell 1936: Honey in the Horn by Harold L. Davis Fiction 1935: Now in November by Josephine Winslow Johnson 1934: Lamb in His Bosom by Caroline Miller 1933: The Store by Thomas Sigismund Stribling 1932: The Good Earth by Pearl S. Buck 1931 : Years of Grace by Margaret Ayer Barnes 1930: Laughing Boy by Oliver La Farge 1929: Scarlet Sister Mary by Julia Peterkin 1928: The Bridge of San Luis Rey by Thornton Wilder 1927: Early Autumn by Louis Bromfield 1926: Arrowsmith by Sinclair Lewis (declined prize) 1925: So Big! by Edna Ferber 1924: The Able McLaughlins by Margaret Wilson 1923: One of Ours by Willa Cather 1922: Alice Adams by Booth Tarkington 1921: The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton 1920: no award given 1919: The Magnificent Ambersons by Booth Tarkington 1918: His Family by Ernest Poole Deer Park Public Library 44 Lake Avenue Deer Park, NY 11729 (631) 586-3000 2012: no award given 1980: The Executioner's Song by Norman Mailer 2011: Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan 1979: The Stories of John Cheever by John Cheever 2010: Tinkers by Paul Harding 1978: Elbow Room by James Alan McPherson 2009: Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout 1977: No award given 2008: The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz 1976: Humboldt's Gift by Saul Bellow 2007: The Road by Cormac McCarthy 1975: The Killer Angels by Michael Shaara 2006: March by Geraldine Brooks 1974: No award given 2005: Gilead by Marilynne Robinson 1973: The Optimist's Daughter by Eudora Welty 2004: The Known World by Edward P. -
Q.) the Journal of John Winthrop Is Also Known As the History of New America
Q.) The journal of John Winthrop is also known as The History of New America. A.) False Q.) Benjamin Franklin is known as the First American. A.) True Q.) Thomas Cook authored the United States Declaration of Independence. A.) False Q.) Charlotte Temple was originally published under the title Charlotte, A True Tale. A.) False Q.) Uncle Tom's Cabin is an anti-slavery novel by Harriet Beecher Stowe. A.) True Q.) Wieland is considered the first American gothic novel. A.) True Q.) The author of the famous short stories, Rip Van Winkle and The Legend of Sleepy Hollow is Washington Irving. A.) True Q.) The Leatherstocking Tales series contains six novels. A.) False Q.) The Valley of Utah is the first fiction of Virginia colonial life. A.) False Q.) Richard Henry Dana exclaimed about the poem Thanatopsis, "That was never written on this side of the water!" A.) True Q.) Edgar Allan Poe referred to followers of the Transcendental movement as Fish-Pondians. A.) False Q.) George Washington Harris is the creator of the character Sut Lovingood. A.) True Q.) Dennis Wendell Holmes, Sr. coined the term 'Brahmin Caste of New England.' A.) False Q.) Ralph Waldo Emerson delivered the famous Phi Beta Kappa address 'The American Scholar.' A.) True Q.) Henry David Thoreau penned the essay Civil Obedience. A.) False Q.) Mark Twain called The Scarlet Letter a "perfect work of the American imagination." A.) False Q.) Nathaniel Hawthorne's fiction had a profound impact on Herman Melville. A.) True Q.) H.W. Longfellow was the first American to translate Divine Comedy. -
Summer Reading List.Pages
Hawthorne Valley Waldorf School High School Summer Reading List 2019 You may read any book by an author on the list. Underlined selections are only for 9th and 10th graders. FICTION Adams, Richard Watership Down – a popular modern classic Allende, Isabel Daughter of Fortune – by celebrated Chilean novelist Austen, Jane Pride and Prejudice – no one writes better than Jane Austen does Bauer, Joan Hope Was Here – 2001 Newbery Honor Book Bronte, Charlotte Jane Eyre – Jane is one of the great heroes in English fiction. Bronte, Emily Wuthering Heights – unforgettable “Gothic” tale of love and revenge Buck, Pearl The Good Earth – acclaimed epic novel of life in pre-Communist China Carter, Forrest The Education of Little Tree – Native American life and wisdom Cather, Willa My Antonia – best-known novel by this Pulitzer Prize winner Chevalier, Tracy Girl with a Pearl Earring – “great read,” about Vermeer and one of his models Chopin, Kate The Awakening – considered a radical novel in its time, still challenging today Clarke, Pauline The Return of the Twelves – fantasy/science fiction featuring the Bronte children Conrad, Joseph Lord Jim – one of the great novels of English literature, exciting, challenging Conroy, Patrick Beach Music – absorbing, thought-provoking modern tale Cooper, James Fenimore Last of the Mohicans – classic story of colonial America Cooper, Susan The Dark is Rising – 1974 Newbery Honor Book (read the whole series!) Creech, Sharon Walk Two Moons – 1995 Newbery Medal winner !1 Cushman, Karen Catherine, Called Birdy – 1995 Newbery -
E 344L American Literature, Film, and Culture Between the World Wars
E 344L American Literature, Film, and Culture Between the World Wars Instructor: Kornhaber, D. Areas: Area V Unique #: 34638 Flags: n/a Semester: Fall 2010 Restrictions: n/a Cross‐lists: n/a Computer Instruction: N Prerequisites: Nine semester hours of coursework in English or rhetoric and writing. Description: From the Roaring Twenties to the Great Depression, the period in the United States between the First and Second World Wars was one of the most dynamic and turbulent of the twentieth century—as well as one of the most artistically influential. In this course, we will take a broad look at some of the major artistic figures and products of the age in the areas of literature, film, drama, and other avenues of popular culture like animation. Reading these works in light of the political and social dynamics of the era, we will investigate the various ways in which works in each medium celebrate, chronicle, and challenge both the prosperity of the immediate post‐war years and the turmoil of the depression decade that followed. Viewing them in both an artistic and a social context, we will study the rise of modernism in American literature and drama alongside and in light of the invention of a new filmic language in the pioneering use of cinematography, editing, and sound that marked the cinema of this period. Taken in total, we will aim to better understand the vibrant artistic experimentation and interchange that marked this unique epoch in American life. Major topics to be considered include the legacy of the First World War, the changing place of women, economic prosperity and economic ruin, mechanization and industrialization, political activism and ideology, and concepts of the modern.