English Department


 Grade 12 Summer Reading List:

Taunton Public Library Amazon Books 

 

Students of Taunton High receive  20% off of reading list material with valid student I.D.  This offer is valid ONLY at this Borders Express location (i.e. Borders Express in the Silver City Galleria in Taunton),   (This should be the only book company listed on the site for this.)

 

**Please click on the links to access each short story and poem.**

Applied

(short story) “The Rocking Horse Winner” by D. H. Lawrence

(poem) “The Soldier” by Rupert Brooke 

(poem) “Dulce Et Decorum Est” by Wilfred Owen

(poem) “An Irish Airman Foresees His Death” by William Butler Yeats 

 


Academic

(short story) “The Rocking Horse Winner” by D. H. Lawrence

(poem) “The Soldier” by Rupert Brooke 

(poem) “Dulce Et Decorum Est” by Wilfred Owen

(poem) “An Irish Airman Foresees His Death” by William Butler Yeats

(novel) Lord of the Flies by William Golding

 


Honors

(short story) “The Rocking Horse Winner” by D. H. Lawrence

(poem) “The Soldier” by Rupert Brooke 

(poem) “Dulce Et Decorum Est” by Wilfred Owen

(poem) “An Irish Airman Foresees His Death” by William Butler Yeats

(novel) Lord of the Flies by William Golding

(novel) 1984  by George Orwell

 

All selections below can be found in Short Stories and Poems for Extremely Intelligent Children of All Ages, Harold Bloom

Book I…Spring

(poem) “The Human Seasons” by John Keats 

(from Twelfth Night) “The Wind and The Rain” by Shakespeare

(short story) “How the Rhinoceros Got His Skin” by Rudyard Kipling

(poem) “A Musical Instrument” by Elizabeth B. Browning

Book II…Summer

(poem) “A Pig-Tale” by Lewis Carroll

(short story) “The Elephant’s Child

(poem) “Echo’s Lament for Narcissus” by Ben Johnson

(poem) “The Way Through the Woods” by Rudyard Kipling

Book III…Autumn

(short story) “The Problem with Thor Bridge” by Arthur Conan Doyle 

(poem) “The Goblin Market” by Christina Rossetti 

(poem) “The Unquiet Grave” by Anonymous

(poem) “The Splendour Falls on Castle Walls” by Alfred, Lord Tennyson

(poem) “So, We’ll Go No More A-Roving” by George Gordon, Lord Byron

Book IV…Winter

(poem) “A Merry Note” or “Winter  by William Shakespeare

(poem) “Blow, Blow Thou Winter Wind” by Shakespeare 

(poem) “Nightmare” by William Schwenk Gilbert 

(poem) “A Wintry Sonnet” by Christina Rossetti

(poem) “Night” by William Blake

(poem) “Mariana” by Alfred, Lord Tennyson 

(poem) “Up-Hill” by Christina Rossetti 

 


Advanced Placement

Summer Reading and Assignments

Rather than simply reading selected books in a vacuum over the summer and then being subjected to needlessly picky multiple guess exams in the fall, I’d like you to instead engage with a number of works that can then become a common set of texts for us to refer to as a class throughout the year.  In doing so, you’ll be both reading and writing about literature, which is, after all, the primary activity of this course.

The specific works and assignments are listed below.  Please remember that everything that you write should be typed, double-spaced with 1?– 1 ¼? margins, devoid of surface errors, and prefaced by a brief heading indicating your name, the assignment, and the due date (which is the very first day of class).  Please staple all writing for each part together separately, and then join the entire packet with a binder clip of some sort.  Assignments will be evaluated for both their understanding of the works read and the quality of their ideas and writing.  Each will count as one short essay in your first quarter grade.

 

Part One: Drama

First, read the all four of the following plays:

Next, think about the prominent physical objects found in each play (these might be small objects that function as props, such as a loaf of bread, or large objects that serve as the setting of the play, such as the deck of a ship).  What is the practical, physical importance of these objects to the action of the play?  How might they also serve symbolic functions that contribute to the overall meaning of the play?  Choose three objects from each play and write a brief paragraph on each explaining their significance.

Now write an essay of 700-1200 words on one of the plays in which you suggest a theme for the work in general and use the physical objects that you have identified as evidence supporting your assertion.  (One can imagine a format for these essays that would include an opening paragraph that introduces the play and states your suggested theme in a clear thesis, three paragraphs discussing each object in turn, and then a final paragraph which both restates your thesis and suggests why it matters.)

 

Part Two: Non-Fiction

Read one of the following works of non-fiction:

As you read, think about the following questions:  What is the author’s main point in this work about his or her specific subject?  In addition to this, what broader point might the author be making about human nature or the world at large?  Finally, how does the author develop these points – in other words, what tone, style, types of evidence, or rhetorical techniques does he or she use to convince the reader?

Rather than writing a formal essay, you should first write a paragraph or two addressing each of the questions listed above.  Then, you should list the following:

 

Part Three: Poetry

First read all of the poems listed below one of the following authors:

 

William Wordsworth

"Lines Composed a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey"

"The Green Linnet"

"I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud"

"Mutability"

"My Heart Leaps Up When I Behold"

"The Reaper"

"She Dwealt Among the Untrodden Ways"

"The Sun Has Long Been Set"

"Three Years She Grew in Sun and Shower"

"To a Skylark"

"To the Cuckoo"

"Written in Early Spring"

 

Samuel Taylor Coleridge

"This Lime-Tree Bower My Prison"

"The Rhyme of the Ancient Mariner"

"Frost at Midnight"

"Kubla Khan"

"Inscription for a Fountain on a Heath"

"To Nature"

 

A. E. Houseman   

"Loveliest of Trees, the Cherry Now"

"On moonlit heath and lonesome bank"

"When I was one-and-twenty"

"To an Athlete Dying Young"

"Brendon Hill"

"In my own shire, if I was sad"

"Far in a western brookland"

"Grenadier"

"The mill-stream, now that noise cease"

Then, drawing on all of the poems you have read but relying on evidence drawn from 3-4 specific poems, write an essay in which you attempt to explain your author’s view of any one particular subject.  (If you notice that three or four poems all discuss fire trucks, for instance, you might want to write an essay in which you explain to your reader your author’s opinion of fire fighting.)  Try to choose a subject that is broad enough to support an interesting essay, but not so broad as to make drawing a specific conclusion impossible.  Your final essay should likely be 700 to 1200 words in length.

When writing about poetry, keep two general considerations in mind.  First, be sure to consider both the literal meaning of the words in the poem as well as the figurative; understanding both is necessary to developing a full appreciation of the poem’s effect.  In addition, be certain to support your arguments with direct evidence from the text: only by quoting from the text and using specific verbal and musical evidence can you create a compelling case for your thesis.

 

Part Four: Novel

Read one of the following novels, paying attention to both story and structure:

Things Fall Apart by Chinua  Achebe

Catch 22 by Joseph Heller

1984 by George Orwell

Lord of the Flies by William Golding    

All four of the novels listed deal in some way with human nature and the organization of society.  In a carefully argued essay of 700 to 1200 words that considers both the literal and metaphorical meanings of the novel you have selected, explain what point your work makes on this topic.  What are human beings like, according to your novel, and how should their interactions be organized?  How does the (literal or figurative) journey of your protagonist illustrate this point?  How might his outcome be emblematic of the author’s vision of how society functions?

 



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