Literature & Composition
Second Edition ©2017 Carol Jago; Renee H. Shea; Lawrence Scanlon; Robin Dissin Aufses
Authors
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Carol Jago
Carol Jago has taught English in middle and high school for thirty-two years and directs the California Reading and Literature Project at UCLA. She is a past president of the National Council of Teachers of English. Jago served as AP Literature content advisor for the College Board and now serves on their English Academic Advisory committee. She has published six books with Heinemann, including With Rigor for All and Papers, Papers, Papers. She has also published four books on contemporary multicultural authors for NCTE’s High School Literature series. Carol was an education columnist for the Los Angeles Times, and her essays have appeared in English Journal, Language Arts, NEA Today, as well as in other newspapers across the nation. She edits the journal of the California Association of Teachers of English, California English, and served on the planning committee for the 2009 NAEP Reading Framework and the 2011 NAEP Writing Framework.
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Renee Shea
Renée H. Shea was professor of English and Modern Languages and director of freshman composition at Bowie State University in Maryland, where she taught graduate seminars in rhetoric. A College Board faculty consultant for more than thirty years in AP® Language and Literature, and Pre-AP® English, she has been a reader and question leader for both AP® English exams. Renée served as a member on many committees for the College Board, including the AP® Language and Composition Development Committee, the English Academic Advisory Committee, and the SAT Critical Reading Test Development Committee. She is co-author of Literature & Composition, American Literature & Rhetoric, Conversations in American Literature, Advanced Language & Literature, and Foundations of Language & Literature, as well as volumes on Amy Tan and Zora Neale Hurston for the NCTE High School Literature Series. Renée continues to write about contemporary authors for publications such as World Literature Today, Poets & Writers, and Kenyon Review. Her recent publications focused on Celeste Ng, Imbolo Mbue, Namwali Serpell, Manuel Muñoz, and Ohio’s 2020–2024 poet laureate, Kari Gunter-Seymour.
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Lawrence Scanlon
Lawrence Scanlon taught at Brewster High School for more than thirty years and then for another ten years at Iona College in New York. For twenty-five years, he was a Reader and Question Leader for the AP® Language and Composition Exam. As a College Board consultant over that same period of time, he has conducted AP® workshops in both AP® English Language and AP® English Literature throughout the United States and in South America, Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. He has also provided professional development as a private consultant for many school districts. He served on the PSAT Review Committee and the AP® English Language Test Development Committee. Larry is co-author of Literature & Composition, American Literature & Rhetoric, and Conversations in American Literature and has published articles on curriculum and method for the College Board and elsewhere.
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Robin Aufses
Robin Dissin Aufses is director of English Studies at Lycée Français de New York, where she teaches AP® English Language and Composition. Previous to this position, Robin was the English department chair and a teacher at John F. Kennedy High School in Bellmore, New York, and prior to that she taught English at Paul D. Schreiber High School in Port Washington, New York. She taught AP® English Literature and AP® English Language at both schools. She is co-author of Literature & Composition, American Literature & Rhetoric, and Conversations in American Literature and has published articles for the College Board on novelist Chang-rae Lee and the novel All the King’s Men.
Table of Contents
1 –Literature as Conversation: The Active Reader
One must be an inventor to read well... There is then creative reading, as well as creative writing. — Ralph Waldo Emerson, ‘The American Scholar’
What Is Active Reading?
Telling It Slant
Emily Dickinson, Tell all the Truth but tell it slant —
Activity: Mary Oliver, Spring in the Classroom
Becoming an Active Reader
Annotation
William Shakespeare, Sonnet 29
Activity: Mark Doty, Golden Retrievals
Reading Journal
Alice Walker, from Everyday Use
Activity: Claude McKay, The Harlem Dancer
Think Aloud Dialogue
Activity: Karen Russell, from Swamplandia!
2 – The Big Picture: Analyzing Fiction and Drama
“Pull a thread here and you’ll find it’s attached to the rest of the world.” — Nadeem Aslam, The Wasted Vigil
Elements of Fiction
Plot
Gabriel Garcia Marquez, One of These Days
Activity
Character
Jane Austen, from Pride and Prejudice
Activity: James Welch, from Fools Crow
Setting
Edgar Allan Poe, from The Masque of the Red Death
John Steinbeck, from The Grapes of Wrath
Henry Roth, from Call It Sleep
George Orwell, from 1984
Activity: Thomas Hardy, from Tess of the D’Urbervilles
Point of View
Dinaw Mengestu, from The Beautiful Things That Heaven Bears
Mark Twain, from The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
Katharine Mansfield, from Miss Brill
Shirley Jackson, from The Lottery
James Joyce, from Mrs. Ulysses
Activity: Brad Watson, Seeing Eye
Suzanne Berne, from A Crime in the Neighborhood
Emily Bronte, from Wuthering Heights
Activity: Colm Toibin, from Brooklyn
Symbol and Metaphor
Ernest Hemingway, from The End of Something
Stephen King, from The Gunslinger
Activity: Naguib Mahfouz, Half a Day
Theme
Edward P. Jones, The First Day
Activity: Jamaica Kincaid, Girl
Analyzing Drama
Plot
Character
George Bernard Shaw, from Pygmalion
William Shakespeare, from Richard III
Setting
Henrik Ibsen, from A Doll’s House
Activity: Hansberry, from A Raisin in the Sun
Symbol
D. L. Coburn, from The Gin Game
Activity: Terrence McNally, Andre’s Mother
From Analysis to Essay: Writing an Interpretive Essay
Susan Glaspell, Trifles
Analyzing Literary Elements
Activity
Developing a Thesis Statement
Activity
Planning an Interpretive Essay
Activity
Supporting Your Interpretation
Activity
A Sample Interpretive Essay: Aneyn M. O’Grady, Student Essay on Trifles
Activity
3 – Close Reading: Analyzing Passages of Fiction
“A writer only begins a book; a reader finishes it.” — Samuel Johnson,
What Is Close Reading?
From First Impressions to Questions
F. Scott Fitzgerald, from The Great Gatsby
Talking with the Text
Activity: Zora Neale Hurston, from Their Eyes Were Watching God
Literary Elements
Willa Cather, from My Antonia
Diction
Figurative Language
Activity: George Eliot, from Middlemarch
Syntax
Tone and Mood
Activity: Sarah Orne Jewett, from A White Heron
Connecting Literary Elements of Style
Thomas Hardy, from Far from the Madding Crowd
Activity: V. S. Naipaul, from A House for Mr Biswas
From Analysis to Essay: Writing a Close Analysis Essay
John Cheever, Reunion
Preparing to Write
Developing a Thesis Statement
Organizing a Close Analysis Essay
Integrating Quotations
A Sample Close Analysis Essay: A “Reunion” Gone Wrong
Activity: Toni Morrison, from Song of Solomon
4 – Close Reading: Analyzing Poetry
Poetry might be defined as the clear expression of mixed feelings. — W. H. Auden, New Year Letter
Close Reading Poetry
Step 1: Reading for Literal Meaning
Seamus Heaney, Digging
Activity: Christina Rossetti, Promises like Pie-Crust
Step 2: Consider the Speaker 112
Diction
Shifts
Tone and Mood
Activity: Elizabeth Barrett Browning, My Heart and I
Step 3: Reading for Detail
A. E. Housman, To An Athlete Dying Young
Figurative Language
Activity: Derek Walcott, XIV
Structure
Activity: Alice Moore Dunbar-Nelson, Sonnet
Sound
Activity: Marilyn Nelson, The Century Quilt
Connecting Poetic Elements of Style
Robert Herrick, Delight in Disorder
Activity: John Keats, Bright Star, would I were stedfast as thou art
From Analysis to Essay: Writing a Close Analysis Essay
Maxine Kumin, Woodchucks
Preparing to Write
Developing a Thesis Statement
Organizing a Close Analysis Essay
Integrating Quotations
Documenting Sources
A Sample Close Analysis Essay: Antoine Assaf, Student Essay on Woodchucks
Activity: William Stafford, Traveling Through the Dark
Working with Two Texts: The Comparison and Contrast Essay
Activity
Developing a Thesis Statement
Organizing a Comparison and Contrast Essay
Transitions
Documenting Sources
A Sample Comparison and Contrast Essay: Javier Echevarria, Student Essay on Woodchucks and Traveling Through the Dark
Activity: Lucille Clifton, in the inner city and Claude McKay, The City’s Love
5 – Home and Family
Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way. — Leo Tolstoy, Anna Karenina
Central Text
August Wilson, Fences
Classic Text
Franz Kafka, The Metamorphosis
Texts in Context: The Metamorphosis and the Modernist Vision
T. S. Eliot, from Tradition and the Individual Talent (nonfiction)
Otto Dix, The War (painting)
Robert Burns, A Red, Red Rose and H. D., Sea Rose (poetry)
Amy Lowell, The Emperor’s Garden (poetry) and A London Thoroughfare, 2 AM (poetry)
Fernand Leger, La Ville (painting)
T. S. Eliot, The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock (poetry)
Virginia Woolf, from Mrs. Dalloway (fiction)
Fiction
Tillie Olsen, I Stand Here Ironing
Helena Maria Viramontes, The Moths
Alice Munro, The Progress of Love
Poetry
Ben Jonson, On My First Son
Anne Bradstreet, Before the Birth of One of Her Children
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Sonnet: On Receiving a Letter Informing Me of the Birth of a Son, 1796
William Wordsworth, We Are Seven
William Butler Yeats, A Prayer for My Daughter
Langston Hughes, Mother to Son
Richard Wilbur, The Writer
Simon Ortiz, My Father’s Song
Sharon Olds, Rite of Passage
Naomi Shihab Nye, My Father and the Fig Tree
Mary Oliver, Wild Geese
Michael Afaa Weaver, My Father’s Geography
Li-Young Lee, The Hammock
Suzanne Rancourt, Whose Mouth Do I Speak With
Kevin Young, Cousins
Rebecca Hazelton, My Husband
Paired Poems
Robert Hayden, Those Winter Sundays
Theodore Roethke, My Papa’s Waltz
Marilyn Chin, Turtle Soup
Adrienne Su, Peaches
Close Reading: Connotation
Suggestions for Writing: Home and Family
6 – Identity and Culture
No man, for any considerable period, can wear one face to himself, and another ot the multitude, without finally getting bewildered as to which may be the true. —Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter
Central Text
Jhumpa Lahiri, Interpreter of Maladies
Classic Text
Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness
Texts in Context: Heart of Darkness and the Legacy of Colonialism
Chinua Achebe, An Image of Africa (nonfiction)
Binyavanga Wainaina, How to Write About Africa (nonfiction)
Rudyard Kipling, The White Man’s Burden (poetry)
H. T. Johnson, The Black Man’s Burden (poetry)
Amedeo Modigliani, Woman’s Head (sculpture) and Fang Ngil Mask (sculpture)
Doris Lessing, The Old Chief Mshlanga (fiction)
Felix Mnthali, The Stranglehold of English Lit (poetry)
Leopold Senghor, In Memoriam (poetry)
Fiction
Nathaniel Hawthorne, Young Goodman Brown
Joyce Carol Oates, Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Apollo
Poetry
Alexander Pope, The Quiet Life
William Wordsworth, The World Is Too Much With Us
Ralph Waldo Emerson, The Apology
Emily Dickinson, I’m Nobody! Who Are You?
Countee Cullen, Heritage
Robert Frost, The Most of It
Dylan Thomas, Fern Hill
Gwendolyn Brooks, We Real Cool
Sylvia Plath, Mirror
Mahmoud Darwish, Identity Card
Kamau Brathwaite, Ogun
Nathalie Handal, Caribe in Nueva York
Natalie Diaz, The Facts of Art
Molly Rose Quinn, Dolorosa
Gregory Pardlo, Written by Himself
Juan Felipe Herrera, Half-Mexican
Paired Poems
John Milton, When I consider how my light is spent
Jorge Luis Borges, A Blindman
Natasha Trethewey, History Lesson
Natasha Trethewey, Southern History
Jennifer Fumiko Cahill, Where You Fell
Dara Barnat, Imprint
Close Reading: Figurative Language
Suggestions for Writing: Identity and Culture
7 – Love and Relationships
Ay me! for aught that I could ever read,
Could ever hear by tale or history,
The course of true love never did run smooth.
— William Shakespeare, A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Central Text
James Joyce, The Dead
Classic Text
Oscar Wilde, The Importance of Being Earnest
Texts in Context: The Importance of Being Earnest and The Satiric Tradition
George Bernard Shaw, from A New Old Play and an Old New One (nonfiction)
The Onion, School “Fine,” U. S. Teens Report (nonfiction)
Jane Austen, from Pride and Prejudice (fiction)
Jonathan Swift, A Satirical Elegy on the Death of a Late Famous General (poetry)
“I Want Out” and “I Want You” (propaganda posters)
Sherman Alexie, How to Write the Great American Indian Novel (poem)
Ishmael Reed, Points of View (poetry)
Matthea Harvey, PROM KING AND QUEEN SEEK U. N. RECOGNITION OF THEIR OWN COUNTRY…PROMVANIA! (poetry)
Fiction
Katherine Mansfield, Bliss
William Faulkner, A Rose for Emily
Sandra Cisneros, Woman Hollering Creek
Poetry [Renee]
Sir Thomas Wyatt, They flee from me
Sir Philip Sidney, Leave me, O Love, which reachest but to dust
John Donne, The Flea
Robert Herrick, To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time
Lord Byron, She walks in Beauty
Edna St. Vincent Millay, Love is not all
Margaret Atwood, Siren Song
Elizabeth Bishop, One Art
Audre Lorde, Movement Song
Billy Collins, Weighing the Dog
Cornelius Eady, I’m a Fool to Love You
Jane Hirschfield, This was once a love poem
David Hernandez, Lisa
Major Jackson, Urban Renewal XVIII
Warsan Shire, For Women Who Are Difficult to Love
Aimee Nezhukumatathil, Chess
Paired Poems
William Shakespeare, My mistress’s eyes are nothing like the sun
Pablo Neruda, Mi fea, Sonet XX
Pablo Neruda, My ugly love, Sonnet XX
John Donne, A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning
Adrienne Rich, A Valediction Forbidding Mourning
Close Reading: Irony
Suggestions for Writing: Love and Relationships
8 – Conformity and Rebellion
Not all those who wander are lost. — J.R.R. Tolkien, The Lord of the Rings
Central Text
Edwidge Danticat, The Book of the Dead
Classic Text
William Shakespeare, Hamlet
Texts in Context: The Character of Hamlet
Marjorie Garber, from Hamlet: The Matter of Character (nonfiction)
Sir Thomas Lawrence, John Philip Kemble as Hamlet (painting)
Hamlet and the Ghost of His Father (painting)
William Hazlitt, from The Characters of Shakespeare’s Plays (nonfiction)
C. S. Lewis, Hamlet—The Prince or the Poem? (nonfiction)
Zbigniew Herbert, Elegy of Fortinbras (poetry)
Margaret Atwood, Gertrude Talks Back (poetry)
Meghan O’Rourke, The Long Goodbye (nonfiction)
Fiction
Herman Melville, Bartleby, the Scrivener: A Story of Wall Street
Zora Neale Hurston, Spunk
Karen Russell, The Prospectors
Poetry
Alexander Pope, Sound and Sense
Percy Bysshe Shelley, Song: To the Men of England
Emily Dickinson, Much Madness is divinest Sense—
Wallace Stevens, Disillusionment at Ten O’clock
E. E. Cummings, anyone lived in a pretty how town
Dylan Thomas, Do not go gentle into that good night
Gwendolyn Brooks, The Chicago Defender Sends a Reporter to Little Rock
Anne Sexton, Her Kind
Frank O’Hara, The Day Lady Died
Allen Ginsberg, Is About
Terrance Hayes, Talk
Barbara Jane Reyes, To Be Walang Hiya
Robin Coste Lewis, Art & Craft
Jamila Woods, Ghazal for White Hen Pantry
Paired Poems
Matthew Prior, An Epitaph
W. H. Auden, The Unknown Citizen
Carol Ann Duffy, Penelope
A. E. Stallings, The Wife of the Man of Many Wiles
Close Reading: Tone
Suggestions for Writing: Conformity and Rebellion
9 – Tradition and Progress
The world owes all its onward impulses to men ill at ease. The happy man inevitably confines himself within ancient limits. — Nathaniel Hawthorne
Central Text
Flannery O’Connor, A Good Man Is Hard to Find
Classic Text
Mary Shelley, Frankenstein
Texts in Context: The Ethical Implications of Frankenstein
Stephen Gould, from The Monster’s Human Nature (nonfiction)
Jericho Brown, Dear Dr. Frankenstein (poetry)
Brian Aldiss, Super Toys Last All Summer Long (fiction)
Jon Turney, from Frankenstein’s Footsteps (nonfiction)
Stephen Dunn, Mary Shelley in Brigantine (poetry)
Alison Hawthorne Deming, Science (poetry)
Cari Romm, The Enduring Scariness of the Mad Scientist (nonfiction)
Fiction
James Baldwin, Sonny’s Blues
Alice Walker, Everyday Use
Hanif Kureishi, We’re Not Jews
Poetry
Thomas Gray, Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard
William Blake, London
Matthew Arnold, Dover Beach
Gerard Manley Hopkins, God’s Grandeur
Emily Dickinson, Crumbling is not an instant’s Act
Robert Frost, Mending Wall
William Butler Yeats, The Second Coming
James Wright, Autumn Begins in Martin’s Ferry, Ohio
Seamus Heaney, Bogland
Yehuda Amichai, The Eve of Rosh Hashanah
May Swenson, Goodbye, Goldeneye
Toi Derricotte, Black Boys Play the Classics
Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, Indian Movie, New Jersey
Amit Majmudar, To the Hyphenated Poets
Richard Blanco, Mother Country
LeConté Dill, We Who Weave
Paired Poems
Walt Whitman, Mannahatta
Carl Sandburg, Chicago
William Wordsworth, London, 1802
Paul Laurence Dunbar, Douglass
Close Reading: Syntax
Suggestions for Writing: Tradition and Progress
10 – War and Peace
Do dreams offer lessons? Do nightmares have themes, do we awaken and analyze them and live our lives and advise others as a result? Can the foot soldier teach anything important about war, merely for having been there? I think not. He can tell war stories. — Tim O’Brien, If I Die in a Combat Zone
Central Text
Tim O’Brien, The Things They Carried
Classic Text
William Shakespeare, Othello
Texts in Context: Critical Perspectives on Othello
Isaac Butler, Why Is Othello Black? (nonfiction)
Charles Lamb, from Othello’s Color: Theatrical vs. Literary Representation (nonfiction)
Jennifer Hill Coucher, Reading Othello and Watching a Girl Skip Rope (poetry)
Nicole Galland, from I, Iago (fiction)
James Earl Jones, from The Sun God (nonfiction)
Andrew Davies, from Othello (screenplay)
Toni Morrison, from Desdemona (fiction)
Fiction
Cynthia Ozick, The Shawl
Bharati Mukherjee, The Management of Grief
Phil Klay, Ten Kliks South
Poetry
Julia Ward Howe, Battle Hymn of the Republic
Walt Whitman, Vigil strange I kept on the field one night
Thomas Hardy, Channel Firing
Siegfried Sassoon, Lamentations
Wilfred Owen, Dulce et Decorum Est
Anna Akhmatova, The First Long-Range Artillery Shell in Leningrad
Henry Reed, Naming of Parts
Richard Wilbur, First Snow in Alsace
Uri Zvi Greenberg, We Were Not Likened to Dogs
Margaret Atwood, It Is Dangerous to Read Newspapers
Wislawa Szymborska, The Terrorist, He Watches
Yousif al-Sa’igh, An Iraqi Evening
Dunya Mikhail, The War Works Hard
Brian Turner, Sadiq
Solmaz Sharif, Safe House
Cathy Linh Che, Split
Jill McDonough, Twelve-Hour Shifts
Amit Majmudar, Welcome Home, Troops!
Paired Poems
Richard Lovelace, To Lucasta, Going to the Wars
Robert Graves, To Lucasta on Going to the War—for the Fourth Time
Thomas Hardy, A Wife in London
Yusef Komunyakaa, Between Days
Wilfred Owen, The Parable of the Old Man and the Young
Wilfred Owen, Arms and the Boy
Close Reading: Imagery
Suggestions for Writing: War and Peace
MLA Guidelines for a List of Works Cited
Glossary of Terms
Index
Product Updates
NEW! Chapter 4. Close Reading: Analyzing Poetry takes students step by step through the process of writing close analyses and comparisons of poetry. The instruction emphasizes the connection between style and meaning, providing solid preparation for Free Response Question #1 on the AP® Literature Exam.
New! Texts in Context
These fascinating casebooks open up engaging avenues of investigation for you and your students with such themes as:
The Metamorphosis and the Modernist Vision
Heart of Darkness and the Legacy of Colonialism
The Importance of Being Earnest and the Satiric Tradition
Hamlet and the Evolution of Character
Frankenstein and the Ethics of Creation
Othello through Critical Lenses
More! Paired Poems in Each Chapter
There are now two or three sets of paired poems in each thematic chapter, offering a wider range of selections for you, and more practice for your students.
New! Full-Color Design
Analyzing visuals can help bring a text to life, foster creative analysis, and be a springboard to textual analysis. With this edition, Literature & Composition is now full color, featuring visuals in their original format right alongside the texts they inform. An analytical question connects each image back to the text.
More! Full-length Works
With the addition of Frankenstein and Othello, this edition offers nine full-length works to prepare students for the open question of the AP® Literature Exam:
Susan Glaspell, Trifles (drama)
August Wilson, Fences (drama)
Franz Kafka, The Metamorphosis (novel)
Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness (novel)
James Joyce, The Dead (novella)
Oscar Wilde, The Importance of Being Earnest (drama)
William Shakespeare, Hamlet (drama)
New! Mary Shelley, Frankenstein (novel)
New! William Shakespeare, Othello (drama)
Exceptional Teaching Support
Teacher’s Edition
Written by teachers for teachers, the Teacher’s Edition includes practical planning tools, teaching ideas, notes on potential pitfalls for students, close reading suggestions, and other essential tools and tips from master teachers. All of this support is placed in the margins of the book, so you always have it right where you need it.
Teacher’s Resource Flash Drive
This handy flash drive contains additional teacher and student resources for Literature & Composition, Second Edition, including:
• Suggested responses to questions
• Classroom strategies and how-tos
• Vocabulary support
• Key passages for annotation
• Audio/Video/Documents
ExamView for Literature & Composition, Second Edition
With more than 1,200 simulated AP© multiple-choice questions, this test bank is the first and largest available for AP® Lit. The ExamView Test Generator lets you quickly create paper, Internet, and LAN-based tests. You can create and format a test in minutes in a fully customizable platform that lets you enter your own questions, edit existing questions, set time limits, incorporate multimedia, and scramble answers and question order to prevent plagiarism. Detailed results report feed into a gradebook.
Authors
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Carol Jago
Carol Jago has taught English in middle and high school for thirty-two years and directs the California Reading and Literature Project at UCLA. She is a past president of the National Council of Teachers of English. Jago served as AP Literature content advisor for the College Board and now serves on their English Academic Advisory committee. She has published six books with Heinemann, including With Rigor for All and Papers, Papers, Papers. She has also published four books on contemporary multicultural authors for NCTE’s High School Literature series. Carol was an education columnist for the Los Angeles Times, and her essays have appeared in English Journal, Language Arts, NEA Today, as well as in other newspapers across the nation. She edits the journal of the California Association of Teachers of English, California English, and served on the planning committee for the 2009 NAEP Reading Framework and the 2011 NAEP Writing Framework.
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Renee Shea
Renée H. Shea was professor of English and Modern Languages and director of freshman composition at Bowie State University in Maryland, where she taught graduate seminars in rhetoric. A College Board faculty consultant for more than thirty years in AP® Language and Literature, and Pre-AP® English, she has been a reader and question leader for both AP® English exams. Renée served as a member on many committees for the College Board, including the AP® Language and Composition Development Committee, the English Academic Advisory Committee, and the SAT Critical Reading Test Development Committee. She is co-author of Literature & Composition, American Literature & Rhetoric, Conversations in American Literature, Advanced Language & Literature, and Foundations of Language & Literature, as well as volumes on Amy Tan and Zora Neale Hurston for the NCTE High School Literature Series. Renée continues to write about contemporary authors for publications such as World Literature Today, Poets & Writers, and Kenyon Review. Her recent publications focused on Celeste Ng, Imbolo Mbue, Namwali Serpell, Manuel Muñoz, and Ohio’s 2020–2024 poet laureate, Kari Gunter-Seymour.
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Lawrence Scanlon
Lawrence Scanlon taught at Brewster High School for more than thirty years and then for another ten years at Iona College in New York. For twenty-five years, he was a Reader and Question Leader for the AP® Language and Composition Exam. As a College Board consultant over that same period of time, he has conducted AP® workshops in both AP® English Language and AP® English Literature throughout the United States and in South America, Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. He has also provided professional development as a private consultant for many school districts. He served on the PSAT Review Committee and the AP® English Language Test Development Committee. Larry is co-author of Literature & Composition, American Literature & Rhetoric, and Conversations in American Literature and has published articles on curriculum and method for the College Board and elsewhere.
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Robin Aufses
Robin Dissin Aufses is director of English Studies at Lycée Français de New York, where she teaches AP® English Language and Composition. Previous to this position, Robin was the English department chair and a teacher at John F. Kennedy High School in Bellmore, New York, and prior to that she taught English at Paul D. Schreiber High School in Port Washington, New York. She taught AP® English Literature and AP® English Language at both schools. She is co-author of Literature & Composition, American Literature & Rhetoric, and Conversations in American Literature and has published articles for the College Board on novelist Chang-rae Lee and the novel All the King’s Men.
Table of Contents
1 –Literature as Conversation: The Active Reader
One must be an inventor to read well... There is then creative reading, as well as creative writing. — Ralph Waldo Emerson, ‘The American Scholar’
What Is Active Reading?
Telling It Slant
Emily Dickinson, Tell all the Truth but tell it slant —
Activity: Mary Oliver, Spring in the Classroom
Becoming an Active Reader
Annotation
William Shakespeare, Sonnet 29
Activity: Mark Doty, Golden Retrievals
Reading Journal
Alice Walker, from Everyday Use
Activity: Claude McKay, The Harlem Dancer
Think Aloud Dialogue
Activity: Karen Russell, from Swamplandia!
2 – The Big Picture: Analyzing Fiction and Drama
“Pull a thread here and you’ll find it’s attached to the rest of the world.” — Nadeem Aslam, The Wasted Vigil
Elements of Fiction
Plot
Gabriel Garcia Marquez, One of These Days
Activity
Character
Jane Austen, from Pride and Prejudice
Activity: James Welch, from Fools Crow
Setting
Edgar Allan Poe, from The Masque of the Red Death
John Steinbeck, from The Grapes of Wrath
Henry Roth, from Call It Sleep
George Orwell, from 1984
Activity: Thomas Hardy, from Tess of the D’Urbervilles
Point of View
Dinaw Mengestu, from The Beautiful Things That Heaven Bears
Mark Twain, from The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
Katharine Mansfield, from Miss Brill
Shirley Jackson, from The Lottery
James Joyce, from Mrs. Ulysses
Activity: Brad Watson, Seeing Eye
Suzanne Berne, from A Crime in the Neighborhood
Emily Bronte, from Wuthering Heights
Activity: Colm Toibin, from Brooklyn
Symbol and Metaphor
Ernest Hemingway, from The End of Something
Stephen King, from The Gunslinger
Activity: Naguib Mahfouz, Half a Day
Theme
Edward P. Jones, The First Day
Activity: Jamaica Kincaid, Girl
Analyzing Drama
Plot
Character
George Bernard Shaw, from Pygmalion
William Shakespeare, from Richard III
Setting
Henrik Ibsen, from A Doll’s House
Activity: Hansberry, from A Raisin in the Sun
Symbol
D. L. Coburn, from The Gin Game
Activity: Terrence McNally, Andre’s Mother
From Analysis to Essay: Writing an Interpretive Essay
Susan Glaspell, Trifles
Analyzing Literary Elements
Activity
Developing a Thesis Statement
Activity
Planning an Interpretive Essay
Activity
Supporting Your Interpretation
Activity
A Sample Interpretive Essay: Aneyn M. O’Grady, Student Essay on Trifles
Activity
3 – Close Reading: Analyzing Passages of Fiction
“A writer only begins a book; a reader finishes it.” — Samuel Johnson,
What Is Close Reading?
From First Impressions to Questions
F. Scott Fitzgerald, from The Great Gatsby
Talking with the Text
Activity: Zora Neale Hurston, from Their Eyes Were Watching God
Literary Elements
Willa Cather, from My Antonia
Diction
Figurative Language
Activity: George Eliot, from Middlemarch
Syntax
Tone and Mood
Activity: Sarah Orne Jewett, from A White Heron
Connecting Literary Elements of Style
Thomas Hardy, from Far from the Madding Crowd
Activity: V. S. Naipaul, from A House for Mr Biswas
From Analysis to Essay: Writing a Close Analysis Essay
John Cheever, Reunion
Preparing to Write
Developing a Thesis Statement
Organizing a Close Analysis Essay
Integrating Quotations
A Sample Close Analysis Essay: A “Reunion” Gone Wrong
Activity: Toni Morrison, from Song of Solomon
4 – Close Reading: Analyzing Poetry
Poetry might be defined as the clear expression of mixed feelings. — W. H. Auden, New Year Letter
Close Reading Poetry
Step 1: Reading for Literal Meaning
Seamus Heaney, Digging
Activity: Christina Rossetti, Promises like Pie-Crust
Step 2: Consider the Speaker 112
Diction
Shifts
Tone and Mood
Activity: Elizabeth Barrett Browning, My Heart and I
Step 3: Reading for Detail
A. E. Housman, To An Athlete Dying Young
Figurative Language
Activity: Derek Walcott, XIV
Structure
Activity: Alice Moore Dunbar-Nelson, Sonnet
Sound
Activity: Marilyn Nelson, The Century Quilt
Connecting Poetic Elements of Style
Robert Herrick, Delight in Disorder
Activity: John Keats, Bright Star, would I were stedfast as thou art
From Analysis to Essay: Writing a Close Analysis Essay
Maxine Kumin, Woodchucks
Preparing to Write
Developing a Thesis Statement
Organizing a Close Analysis Essay
Integrating Quotations
Documenting Sources
A Sample Close Analysis Essay: Antoine Assaf, Student Essay on Woodchucks
Activity: William Stafford, Traveling Through the Dark
Working with Two Texts: The Comparison and Contrast Essay
Activity
Developing a Thesis Statement
Organizing a Comparison and Contrast Essay
Transitions
Documenting Sources
A Sample Comparison and Contrast Essay: Javier Echevarria, Student Essay on Woodchucks and Traveling Through the Dark
Activity: Lucille Clifton, in the inner city and Claude McKay, The City’s Love
5 – Home and Family
Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way. — Leo Tolstoy, Anna Karenina
Central Text
August Wilson, Fences
Classic Text
Franz Kafka, The Metamorphosis
Texts in Context: The Metamorphosis and the Modernist Vision
T. S. Eliot, from Tradition and the Individual Talent (nonfiction)
Otto Dix, The War (painting)
Robert Burns, A Red, Red Rose and H. D., Sea Rose (poetry)
Amy Lowell, The Emperor’s Garden (poetry) and A London Thoroughfare, 2 AM (poetry)
Fernand Leger, La Ville (painting)
T. S. Eliot, The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock (poetry)
Virginia Woolf, from Mrs. Dalloway (fiction)
Fiction
Tillie Olsen, I Stand Here Ironing
Helena Maria Viramontes, The Moths
Alice Munro, The Progress of Love
Poetry
Ben Jonson, On My First Son
Anne Bradstreet, Before the Birth of One of Her Children
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Sonnet: On Receiving a Letter Informing Me of the Birth of a Son, 1796
William Wordsworth, We Are Seven
William Butler Yeats, A Prayer for My Daughter
Langston Hughes, Mother to Son
Richard Wilbur, The Writer
Simon Ortiz, My Father’s Song
Sharon Olds, Rite of Passage
Naomi Shihab Nye, My Father and the Fig Tree
Mary Oliver, Wild Geese
Michael Afaa Weaver, My Father’s Geography
Li-Young Lee, The Hammock
Suzanne Rancourt, Whose Mouth Do I Speak With
Kevin Young, Cousins
Rebecca Hazelton, My Husband
Paired Poems
Robert Hayden, Those Winter Sundays
Theodore Roethke, My Papa’s Waltz
Marilyn Chin, Turtle Soup
Adrienne Su, Peaches
Close Reading: Connotation
Suggestions for Writing: Home and Family
6 – Identity and Culture
No man, for any considerable period, can wear one face to himself, and another ot the multitude, without finally getting bewildered as to which may be the true. —Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter
Central Text
Jhumpa Lahiri, Interpreter of Maladies
Classic Text
Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness
Texts in Context: Heart of Darkness and the Legacy of Colonialism
Chinua Achebe, An Image of Africa (nonfiction)
Binyavanga Wainaina, How to Write About Africa (nonfiction)
Rudyard Kipling, The White Man’s Burden (poetry)
H. T. Johnson, The Black Man’s Burden (poetry)
Amedeo Modigliani, Woman’s Head (sculpture) and Fang Ngil Mask (sculpture)
Doris Lessing, The Old Chief Mshlanga (fiction)
Felix Mnthali, The Stranglehold of English Lit (poetry)
Leopold Senghor, In Memoriam (poetry)
Fiction
Nathaniel Hawthorne, Young Goodman Brown
Joyce Carol Oates, Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Apollo
Poetry
Alexander Pope, The Quiet Life
William Wordsworth, The World Is Too Much With Us
Ralph Waldo Emerson, The Apology
Emily Dickinson, I’m Nobody! Who Are You?
Countee Cullen, Heritage
Robert Frost, The Most of It
Dylan Thomas, Fern Hill
Gwendolyn Brooks, We Real Cool
Sylvia Plath, Mirror
Mahmoud Darwish, Identity Card
Kamau Brathwaite, Ogun
Nathalie Handal, Caribe in Nueva York
Natalie Diaz, The Facts of Art
Molly Rose Quinn, Dolorosa
Gregory Pardlo, Written by Himself
Juan Felipe Herrera, Half-Mexican
Paired Poems
John Milton, When I consider how my light is spent
Jorge Luis Borges, A Blindman
Natasha Trethewey, History Lesson
Natasha Trethewey, Southern History
Jennifer Fumiko Cahill, Where You Fell
Dara Barnat, Imprint
Close Reading: Figurative Language
Suggestions for Writing: Identity and Culture
7 – Love and Relationships
Ay me! for aught that I could ever read,
Could ever hear by tale or history,
The course of true love never did run smooth.
— William Shakespeare, A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Central Text
James Joyce, The Dead
Classic Text
Oscar Wilde, The Importance of Being Earnest
Texts in Context: The Importance of Being Earnest and The Satiric Tradition
George Bernard Shaw, from A New Old Play and an Old New One (nonfiction)
The Onion, School “Fine,” U. S. Teens Report (nonfiction)
Jane Austen, from Pride and Prejudice (fiction)
Jonathan Swift, A Satirical Elegy on the Death of a Late Famous General (poetry)
“I Want Out” and “I Want You” (propaganda posters)
Sherman Alexie, How to Write the Great American Indian Novel (poem)
Ishmael Reed, Points of View (poetry)
Matthea Harvey, PROM KING AND QUEEN SEEK U. N. RECOGNITION OF THEIR OWN COUNTRY…PROMVANIA! (poetry)
Fiction
Katherine Mansfield, Bliss
William Faulkner, A Rose for Emily
Sandra Cisneros, Woman Hollering Creek
Poetry [Renee]
Sir Thomas Wyatt, They flee from me
Sir Philip Sidney, Leave me, O Love, which reachest but to dust
John Donne, The Flea
Robert Herrick, To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time
Lord Byron, She walks in Beauty
Edna St. Vincent Millay, Love is not all
Margaret Atwood, Siren Song
Elizabeth Bishop, One Art
Audre Lorde, Movement Song
Billy Collins, Weighing the Dog
Cornelius Eady, I’m a Fool to Love You
Jane Hirschfield, This was once a love poem
David Hernandez, Lisa
Major Jackson, Urban Renewal XVIII
Warsan Shire, For Women Who Are Difficult to Love
Aimee Nezhukumatathil, Chess
Paired Poems
William Shakespeare, My mistress’s eyes are nothing like the sun
Pablo Neruda, Mi fea, Sonet XX
Pablo Neruda, My ugly love, Sonnet XX
John Donne, A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning
Adrienne Rich, A Valediction Forbidding Mourning
Close Reading: Irony
Suggestions for Writing: Love and Relationships
8 – Conformity and Rebellion
Not all those who wander are lost. — J.R.R. Tolkien, The Lord of the Rings
Central Text
Edwidge Danticat, The Book of the Dead
Classic Text
William Shakespeare, Hamlet
Texts in Context: The Character of Hamlet
Marjorie Garber, from Hamlet: The Matter of Character (nonfiction)
Sir Thomas Lawrence, John Philip Kemble as Hamlet (painting)
Hamlet and the Ghost of His Father (painting)
William Hazlitt, from The Characters of Shakespeare’s Plays (nonfiction)
C. S. Lewis, Hamlet—The Prince or the Poem? (nonfiction)
Zbigniew Herbert, Elegy of Fortinbras (poetry)
Margaret Atwood, Gertrude Talks Back (poetry)
Meghan O’Rourke, The Long Goodbye (nonfiction)
Fiction
Herman Melville, Bartleby, the Scrivener: A Story of Wall Street
Zora Neale Hurston, Spunk
Karen Russell, The Prospectors
Poetry
Alexander Pope, Sound and Sense
Percy Bysshe Shelley, Song: To the Men of England
Emily Dickinson, Much Madness is divinest Sense—
Wallace Stevens, Disillusionment at Ten O’clock
E. E. Cummings, anyone lived in a pretty how town
Dylan Thomas, Do not go gentle into that good night
Gwendolyn Brooks, The Chicago Defender Sends a Reporter to Little Rock
Anne Sexton, Her Kind
Frank O’Hara, The Day Lady Died
Allen Ginsberg, Is About
Terrance Hayes, Talk
Barbara Jane Reyes, To Be Walang Hiya
Robin Coste Lewis, Art & Craft
Jamila Woods, Ghazal for White Hen Pantry
Paired Poems
Matthew Prior, An Epitaph
W. H. Auden, The Unknown Citizen
Carol Ann Duffy, Penelope
A. E. Stallings, The Wife of the Man of Many Wiles
Close Reading: Tone
Suggestions for Writing: Conformity and Rebellion
9 – Tradition and Progress
The world owes all its onward impulses to men ill at ease. The happy man inevitably confines himself within ancient limits. — Nathaniel Hawthorne
Central Text
Flannery O’Connor, A Good Man Is Hard to Find
Classic Text
Mary Shelley, Frankenstein
Texts in Context: The Ethical Implications of Frankenstein
Stephen Gould, from The Monster’s Human Nature (nonfiction)
Jericho Brown, Dear Dr. Frankenstein (poetry)
Brian Aldiss, Super Toys Last All Summer Long (fiction)
Jon Turney, from Frankenstein’s Footsteps (nonfiction)
Stephen Dunn, Mary Shelley in Brigantine (poetry)
Alison Hawthorne Deming, Science (poetry)
Cari Romm, The Enduring Scariness of the Mad Scientist (nonfiction)
Fiction
James Baldwin, Sonny’s Blues
Alice Walker, Everyday Use
Hanif Kureishi, We’re Not Jews
Poetry
Thomas Gray, Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard
William Blake, London
Matthew Arnold, Dover Beach
Gerard Manley Hopkins, God’s Grandeur
Emily Dickinson, Crumbling is not an instant’s Act
Robert Frost, Mending Wall
William Butler Yeats, The Second Coming
James Wright, Autumn Begins in Martin’s Ferry, Ohio
Seamus Heaney, Bogland
Yehuda Amichai, The Eve of Rosh Hashanah
May Swenson, Goodbye, Goldeneye
Toi Derricotte, Black Boys Play the Classics
Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, Indian Movie, New Jersey
Amit Majmudar, To the Hyphenated Poets
Richard Blanco, Mother Country
LeConté Dill, We Who Weave
Paired Poems
Walt Whitman, Mannahatta
Carl Sandburg, Chicago
William Wordsworth, London, 1802
Paul Laurence Dunbar, Douglass
Close Reading: Syntax
Suggestions for Writing: Tradition and Progress
10 – War and Peace
Do dreams offer lessons? Do nightmares have themes, do we awaken and analyze them and live our lives and advise others as a result? Can the foot soldier teach anything important about war, merely for having been there? I think not. He can tell war stories. — Tim O’Brien, If I Die in a Combat Zone
Central Text
Tim O’Brien, The Things They Carried
Classic Text
William Shakespeare, Othello
Texts in Context: Critical Perspectives on Othello
Isaac Butler, Why Is Othello Black? (nonfiction)
Charles Lamb, from Othello’s Color: Theatrical vs. Literary Representation (nonfiction)
Jennifer Hill Coucher, Reading Othello and Watching a Girl Skip Rope (poetry)
Nicole Galland, from I, Iago (fiction)
James Earl Jones, from The Sun God (nonfiction)
Andrew Davies, from Othello (screenplay)
Toni Morrison, from Desdemona (fiction)
Fiction
Cynthia Ozick, The Shawl
Bharati Mukherjee, The Management of Grief
Phil Klay, Ten Kliks South
Poetry
Julia Ward Howe, Battle Hymn of the Republic
Walt Whitman, Vigil strange I kept on the field one night
Thomas Hardy, Channel Firing
Siegfried Sassoon, Lamentations
Wilfred Owen, Dulce et Decorum Est
Anna Akhmatova, The First Long-Range Artillery Shell in Leningrad
Henry Reed, Naming of Parts
Richard Wilbur, First Snow in Alsace
Uri Zvi Greenberg, We Were Not Likened to Dogs
Margaret Atwood, It Is Dangerous to Read Newspapers
Wislawa Szymborska, The Terrorist, He Watches
Yousif al-Sa’igh, An Iraqi Evening
Dunya Mikhail, The War Works Hard
Brian Turner, Sadiq
Solmaz Sharif, Safe House
Cathy Linh Che, Split
Jill McDonough, Twelve-Hour Shifts
Amit Majmudar, Welcome Home, Troops!
Paired Poems
Richard Lovelace, To Lucasta, Going to the Wars
Robert Graves, To Lucasta on Going to the War—for the Fourth Time
Thomas Hardy, A Wife in London
Yusef Komunyakaa, Between Days
Wilfred Owen, The Parable of the Old Man and the Young
Wilfred Owen, Arms and the Boy
Close Reading: Imagery
Suggestions for Writing: War and Peace
MLA Guidelines for a List of Works Cited
Glossary of Terms
Index
Product Updates
NEW! Chapter 4. Close Reading: Analyzing Poetry takes students step by step through the process of writing close analyses and comparisons of poetry. The instruction emphasizes the connection between style and meaning, providing solid preparation for Free Response Question #1 on the AP® Literature Exam.
New! Texts in Context
These fascinating casebooks open up engaging avenues of investigation for you and your students with such themes as:
The Metamorphosis and the Modernist Vision
Heart of Darkness and the Legacy of Colonialism
The Importance of Being Earnest and the Satiric Tradition
Hamlet and the Evolution of Character
Frankenstein and the Ethics of Creation
Othello through Critical Lenses
More! Paired Poems in Each Chapter
There are now two or three sets of paired poems in each thematic chapter, offering a wider range of selections for you, and more practice for your students.
New! Full-Color Design
Analyzing visuals can help bring a text to life, foster creative analysis, and be a springboard to textual analysis. With this edition, Literature & Composition is now full color, featuring visuals in their original format right alongside the texts they inform. An analytical question connects each image back to the text.
More! Full-length Works
With the addition of Frankenstein and Othello, this edition offers nine full-length works to prepare students for the open question of the AP® Literature Exam:
Susan Glaspell, Trifles (drama)
August Wilson, Fences (drama)
Franz Kafka, The Metamorphosis (novel)
Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness (novel)
James Joyce, The Dead (novella)
Oscar Wilde, The Importance of Being Earnest (drama)
William Shakespeare, Hamlet (drama)
New! Mary Shelley, Frankenstein (novel)
New! William Shakespeare, Othello (drama)
Exceptional Teaching Support
Teacher’s Edition
Written by teachers for teachers, the Teacher’s Edition includes practical planning tools, teaching ideas, notes on potential pitfalls for students, close reading suggestions, and other essential tools and tips from master teachers. All of this support is placed in the margins of the book, so you always have it right where you need it.
Teacher’s Resource Flash Drive
This handy flash drive contains additional teacher and student resources for Literature & Composition, Second Edition, including:
• Suggested responses to questions
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• Vocabulary support
• Key passages for annotation
• Audio/Video/Documents
ExamView for Literature & Composition, Second Edition
With more than 1,200 simulated AP© multiple-choice questions, this test bank is the first and largest available for AP® Lit. The ExamView Test Generator lets you quickly create paper, Internet, and LAN-based tests. You can create and format a test in minutes in a fully customizable platform that lets you enter your own questions, edit existing questions, set time limits, incorporate multimedia, and scramble answers and question order to prevent plagiarism. Detailed results report feed into a gradebook.
Designed specifically for the AP® Literature and Composition course.
The only book designed specifically for the AP® Literature and Composition course is back and even better. Organized thematically to put meaning first, Literature & Composition offers a wide variety of classic and current literature, plus all of the support students need to analyze and write about it—for assignments and on the AP® Literature Exam.The book is divided into two parts: instructional chapters that teach students the skills they need for success in an AP® Literature course, and thematic chapters the let students explore amazing literature while honing their reading, writing, and analysis skills.
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Annotated Teacher's Edition for Literature and Composition
Carol Jago; Renee H. Shea; Lawrence Scanlon; Robin Dissin Aufses | Second Edition | ©2017 | ISBN:9781319071318Written by teachers for teachers, the Teacher’s Edition offers essential tools and tips from master teachers, including suggestions for building co...
Written by teachers for teachers, the Teacher’s Edition offers essential tools and tips from master teachers, including suggestions for building context, approaches for close reading, places to check for understanding, and teaching ideas designed to engage students and differentiate instruction. All of this support is placed in the margins of the book, so you always have it right where you need it.
Ch.5 Student Edition
Ch.5 Teacher's Edition
Examview Assessment Suite for Literature & Composition
Carol Jago; Renee H. Shea; Lawrence Scanlon; Robin Dissin Aufses | Second Edition | ©2017 | ISBN:9781319056193Covering every piece in the thematic chapters, and including more than 1,200 simulated AP® multiple-choice questions, this test bank is our biggest...
Covering every piece in the thematic chapters, and including more than 1,200 simulated AP® multiple-choice questions, this test bank is our biggest ever for AP® Literature. This test bank is integrated into the e-book or available in ExamView® format.
Teacher's Resources Flash Drive for Literature and Composition
Carol Jago; Renee H. Shea; Lawrence Scanlon; Robin Dissin Aufses | Second Edition | ©2017 | ISBN:9781319071332Test Bank Sample: Ch.5 Home and Family
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Literature & Composition
The only book designed specifically for the AP® Literature and Composition course is back and even better. Organized thematically to put meaning first, Literature & Composition offers a wide variety of classic and current literature, plus all of the support students need to analyze and write about it—for assignments and on the AP® Literature Exam.
The book is divided into two parts: instructional chapters that teach students the skills they need for success in an AP® Literature course, and thematic chapters the let students explore amazing literature while honing their reading, writing, and analysis skills.
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