Tag Archives: summer

Summer Reading Assignment

summer-reading

Students are always asking what they can do to prepare for success in AP Literature. Here, stolen word for word from the fabulous Kylene Beers, who is an expert in adolescent reading and has an amazing website here, is what you should be reading this summer.

  • All the books (and I mean all the books) you really want to read.
  • Any of the books that your friend wants you to read and once you start you actually like.
  • One (or more if you choose) of the books your mom/dad/grandparent/teacher/or any other person who looks a lot older than you promises you will love if once you start it you do indeed discover you do love it.
  • Something you think looks hard. You’ll discover if you really want to read it, it won’t actually be that hard.
  • An author or topic you haven’t read before. You might discover a new topic or author you really like!
  • Joke books. They will keep you laughing (and make your parents nuts). Be sure to tell the corniest jokes during dinner.
  • And then you simply must finish the summer with more of what you want to read.

If you’re looking for a more focused way to prepare for AP Literature, fetch yourself a copy of Thomas Foster’s fabulous book How to Read Literature Like a Professor. Choose a favorite novel—preferably a classic one, since they have the most “meat” to work with—and read it along with Foster’s guide. You’d be surprised how much is hiding in the straw alongside Wilbur in Charlotte’s Web, walking the streets of Maycomb with Scout Finch, fizzing with the champagne at one of Gatsby’s parties, or even pacing the battlements of Macbeth’s castle. Attentive, careful reading always reveals more than the plot and characters do at your first encounter. Foster’s book can help you spot those gems more readily.

Stuck on what to read? Check out the links to the right for the Rory Gilmore Reading Challenge or the 100 Books to Read in a Lifetime for suggestions. Have a great summer, and happy reading!

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2015 AP Summer Reading

summer-reading

Although there is no official summer reading assignment for AP Literature at Dr. Phillips, students who do well on the exam are, almost without exception, inveterate readers. Therefore, you are encouraged to read, read, read in the lazy days before you begin your senior year! Here are some tips and challenges to help you choose:

1. If analyzing literature seems intimidating, we recommend this fine resource: How to Read Literature Like a Professor by Thomas C. Foster, especially since many of you will be transitioning from AP Language and Composition to a literature class.

2. If you want to brush up on or discover some the frequent biblical allusions in British and American literature, read the books of Genesis, Matthew, and John in the Bible.

3. To refresh yourself on all that pesky mythology writers like so much, tackle this classic: Edith Hamilton’s Mythology. If you are a fan of the Percy Jackson and the Olympians series by Rick Riordan or Michael Scott’s The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel series, those will also help refresh you about Greek, Roman, Norse, and Celtic mythology.

4. Obviously we can’t cover everything in one year, so consider picking up a classic you’ve heard of but haven’t had the opportunity to read in school. Below is a list of novels and plays of literary merit which will not be part of the curriculum at Dr. Phillips but frequently appear on the examination. Although all of these works are considered classics, you will find a wide variety of styles and a broad range of topics represented.

A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
A Raisin in the Sun
Catch-22
Crime and Punishment
Death of a Salesman
Heart of Darkness
Invisible Man
Jane Eyre
Madame Bovary
Obasan
The Turn of the Screw
Waiting for Godot

If none of these titles appeal to you, then the Books and Chocolate Classics Challenge has a number of categories that might do the trick. You can find their list of suggested books here.

5. You might also consider reading a recent work that has been nominated for or won a major literary prize such as the National Book Award or Pulitzer Prize, the Man Booker Prize (Great Britain), or the Governor General’s Award (Canada).

6. If you’re just looking for something different to read or need a guiding hand to keep you on track, why not try a book challenge? Here are links to a variety of different challenges. You may not complete one over the summer, but you can certainly broaden your knowledge and your enjoyment by trying one.

PopSugar’s Challenge – 50 books ranging from “read a book with a one word title” to “read a book your mom loves” to “choose a book based solely on its cover,” which gives you plenty of fun choices. Check out the challenge here.

Banned Books Challenge – Feeling daring? Read something that someone else doesn’t want you to! The Buckling Bookshelves blog has created a challenge with levels of participation from “Making Waves” to “Leader of the Revolution.” Sign up here.

Kindred’s Challenge – Another checklist-based challenge that includes everything from choosing a poetry collection to reading something electronically. Pick up the handy infographic for the challenge here. Specific suggested authors all happen to be male (hmm), but that’s offset nicely by the next challenge.

Women Challenge – Discover some amazing female authors through Peek a Book’s third Women Challenge here.

Diversity Challenge – Male or female, most writers studied in literature classes tend to be Caucasian. Discover more amazing books by writers of color through My Little Pocketbook’s Diversity Challenge. Check out some great authors here.

Book Riot’s Read Harder Challenge – Another random choice challenge by one of my favorite book sites online. Choices here range from author origin to genre style to type (how many book challenges do you know select a self-improvement book?). Keep up with other challenge members through Goodreads or the #ReadHarder hashtag. Check out the list here.

Books in Translation – AP offers the opportunity to read some books in translation, but that’s merely a smidgen of the great literature out there that wasn’t written in English. Hop over to the Introverted Reader’s challenge to select translated works here.

Around the World Challenge – This challenge focuses on the book’s content rather than who wrote it. Where do your book’s characters go? Plot their movements and consider some mini-challenges based on geography on a special Google map from It’s All About the Books here.

Chunkster Challenge – Serious books call for serious dedication–especially if they’re long ones. Try your hand at a 450+ page whopper. It may take you all summer for the one book, but it could be amazing! Your chunk o’reading can be in any genre, age group, or format (except graphic novels), so if you never got around to reading Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix because you saw the movie instead, now might be the time to see what the Hollywood folks left out. Sign up here.

Thanks to writer Emma Cueto of Bustle for her great roundup of reading challenges.

Have a great summer, and happy reading!

 

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