Product Description
This course provides a chronological study of classic American literature from the early 1600s to the twentieth century. Detailed historical sections, timelines, and author biographies provide background information on the people, forces, and philosophies that shaped the various literary styles and periods. Featured authors include William Bradford, Benjamin Franklin, Irving, Longfellow, Emerson, Melville, Dickinson, Clemens, Crosby, Frost, Sandburg, and Hemingway.
Suggested Grade Level: 10th–12th
Authors: Paul M. Garrison, Michael Pope, Joshua Privett, and Barbara J. Rooks
Publisher: Bob Jones University Press
Copyright: 2016 (3rd edition)
Number of Pages: 674
Academic Credit: 0.5
Prerequisites: A course equivalent to World Literature is highly recommended.
Book Report Books: Choose any two from the following and list them in the comment box.
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Description: Set in early New England, this “tale of human frailty and sorrow” shows the terrible impact of sin on three people and deals with such issues as guilt and redemption, hypocrisy, and shame. |
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Description: This is the story of Captain Ahab and his mad quest for the White Whale. Considered to be one of the greatest sea stories ever written, this book tells the tale of vengeance and obsession, and their effect on man. |
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Description: This is the story about a young boy named Huckleberry Finn and his journey down the Mississippi River. Written in the vernacular of the day, Twain uses the adventures of Huck to explore life in America prior to the Civil War. Although controversial for its use of racial stereotypes, this book satirizes slavery and the society that supported it. |
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Description: This novel examines the differences between Europe and America through the life of a young American woman who moves to England and is caught in a struggle between independence and social propriety. |