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Fiction. Talking with Amy Tan --
Reading a story --
The art of fiction --
Types of short fiction --
Death has an appointment in Samarra / Sufi Legend --
The north wind and the sun / Aesop --
The tortoise and the geese / Bidpai --
Independence / Chuang Tzu --
Godfather death / Jakob and Wilhelm Grimm --
Plot --
The short story --
A & P / John Updike --
Writing effectively --
Point of view --
Identifying point of view --
Types of narrators --
How much does a narrator know? --
Stream of consciousness --
A Rose for Emily / William Faulkner --
Tell-tale Heart / Edgar Allan Poe --
Why I live at the P.O. / Eudora Welty --
Girl / Jamaica Kincaid --
Writing effectively --
Character --
Characterization --
Motivation --
The jilting of Granny Weatherall / Katherine Anne Porter --
Bullet in the brain / Tobias Wolff --
Everyday use / Alice Walker --
Cathedral / Raymond Carver --
Writing effectively --
Setting --
Elements of setting --
Historical fiction --
Regionalism --
Naturalism --
The storm / Kate Chopin --
To build a fire / Jack London --
The gospel according to Mark / Jorge Luis Borges --
A pair of tickets / Amy Tan --
Writing effectively --
Tone and Style --
Tone --
Style --
Diction --
A clean, well-lighted place / Ernest Hemingway --
Barn burning / William Faulkner --
Irony --
The necklace / Guy de Maupassant --
The story of an hour / Kate Chopin --
Writing effectively --
Theme --
Plot versus theme --
Summarizing the theme --
Finding the theme --
Dead men's path / Chinua Achebe --
The house on Mango Street / Sandra Cisneros --
The parable of the prodigal son / Luke --
Harrison Bergeron / Kurt Vonnegut Jr. --
Writing effectively --
Symbol --
Allegory --
Symbols --
Recognizing symbols --
The chrysanthemums / John Steinbeck --
The yellow wallpaper / Charlotte Perkins Gilman --
The ones who walk away from Omelas / Ursula K. Le Guin --
The lottery / Shirley Jackson --
Writing effectively --
Stories for further reading --
This is what it means to say Phoenix, Arizona / Sherman Alexie --
Happy endings / Margaret Atwood --
Young Goodman Brown / Nathaniel Hawthorne --
The gift of the magi / O. Henry --
Sweat / Zora Neale Hurston --
Saboteur / Ha Jin --
Araby / James Joyce --
Before the law / Franz Kafka --
Miss Brill / Katherine Mansfield --
Where are you going, where have you been? / Joyce Carol Oates --
The things they carried / Tim O'Brien --
A good man is hard to find / Flannery O'Connor --
Tell them not to kill me! / Juan Rulfo --
A haunted house / Virginia Woolf --
Poetry. Talking with Kay Ryan --
Reading a poem --
Poetry or verse --
How to read a poem --
Paraphrase --
The Lake Isle of Innisfree / William Butler Yeats --
Lyric poetry --
Those winter Sundays / Robert Hayden --
Aunt Jennifer's tigers / Adrienne Rich --
Narrative poetry --
Sir Patrick Spence / Anonymous --
"Out, out --" / Robert Frost --
Dramatic poetry --
My last duchess / Robert Browning --
Didactic poetry --
Writing effectively --
Ask me / William Stafford --
Listening to a voice --
Tone --
My papa's waltz / Theodore Roethke --
The wayfarer / Stephen Crane --
The author to her book / Anne Bradstreet --
To a locomotive in winter / Walt Whitman --
I like to see it lap the miles / Emily Dickinson --
For my daughter / Weldon Kees --
The speaker in the poem --
White lies / Natasha Trethewey --
Luke Havergal / Edwin Arlington Robinson --
Dog haiku / Anonymous --
Theme for English B / Langston Hughes --
The farmer's bride / Charlotte Mew --
The red wheelbarrow / William Carlos Williams --
Irony --
Oh no / Robert Creeley --
The unknown citizen / W.H. Auden --
Rite of passage / Sharon Olds --
Second fig / Edna St. Vincent Millay --
The workbox / Thomas Hardy --
For review and further study --
Deliberate / Amy Uyematsu --
To Lucasta / Richard Lovelace --
Dulce et decorum est / Wilfred Owen --
Writing effectively --
Words --
Literal meaning : what a poem says first --
This is just to say / William Carlos Williams --
Diction --
Cargoes / John Masefield --
Batter my heart, three-personed God, for you / John Donne --
The value of a dictionary --
Aftermath / Henry Wadsworth Longfellow --
That will to divest / Kay Ryan --
Friend, on this scaffold Thomas More lies dead / J.V. Cunningham --
Bread / Samuel Menashe --
Grass / Carl Sandburg --
Word choice and word order --
Upon Julia's clothes / Robert Herrick --
The ruined maid / Thomas Hardy --
Lonely hearts / Wendy Cope --
For review and further study --
anyone lived in a pretty how town / e.e. cummings --
Carnation milk / Anonymous --
English con salsa / Gina Valdés --
My heart leaps up when I behold / William Wordsworth --
Mutability / William Wordsworth --
Jabberwocky / Lewis Carroll --
Writing effectively --
Saying and suggesting --
Denotation and connotation --
London / William Blake --
Disillusionment of ten o'clock / Wallace Stevens --
Fire and ice / Robert Frost --
The minefield / Diane Thiel --
Bilingual/bilingüe / Rhina P. Espaillat --
Tears, idle tears / Alfred, Lord Tennyson --
Love calls us to the things of this world / Richard Wilbur --
Writing effectively --
Imagery --
In a station of the Metro / Ezra Pound --
The piercing chill I feel / Taniguchi Buson --
Imagery --
The winter evening settles down / T.S. Eliot --
Root cellar / Theodore Roethke --
The fish / Elizabeth Bishop --
A route of evanescence / Emily Dickinson --
Reapers / Jean Toomer --
Pied beauty / Gerard Manley Hopkins --
About haiku --
The falling flower / Arakida Moritake --
Heat-lightning streak / Matsuo Basho --
In the old stone pool / Matsuo Basho --
On the one-ton temple bell / Taniguchi Buson --
Moonrise on mudflats / Taniguchi Buson --
only one guy / Kobayashi Issa --
Cricket / Kobayashi Issa --
Haiku from Japanese internment camps --
Rain shower from mountain / Suiko Matsushita --
Cosmos in bloom / Suiko Matsushita --
Even the croaking of frogs / Hakuro Wada --
The war, this year / Neiji Ozawa --
Contemporary haiku --
The old neighborhood / Nick Virgilio --
Visitor's room / Lee Gurga --
Born again / Jennifer Brutschy --
Learning to shave / Adelle Foley --
For review and further study --
Bright star, would I were steadfast as thou art / John Keats --
Lipstick / Tami Haaland --
El hombre / William Carlos Williams --
Drinking alone by moonlight / Li Po, translated by Arthur Waley --
Not waving but drowning / Stevie Smith --
Driving to town late to mail a letter / Robert Bly --
Writing effectively --
Figures of Speech --
Why speak figuratively? --
The eagle / Alfred, Lord Tennyson --
Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? / William Shakespeare --
Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? / Howard Moss --
Metaphor and simile --
My life had stood, a loaded gun / Emily Dickinson --
Flower in the crannied wall / Alfred, Lord Tennyson --
To see a world in a grain of sand / William Blake --
Metaphors / Sylvia Plath --
Simile / N. Scott Momaday --
A Martian sends a postcard home / Craig Raine --
Other figures of speech --
The wind / James Stephens --
You fit into me / Margaret Atwood --
Epitaph / Timothy Steele --
Money / Dana Gioia --
Fog / Carl Sandburg --
For review and further study --
The secret sits / Robert Frost --
Turtle / Kay Ryan --
Love and friendship / Emily Brontë --
Ode on a Grecian urn / John Keats --
Writing effectively --
Sound --
Sound as meaning --
Who goes with Fergus? / William Butler Yeats --
(from) Ulalume / Edgar Allan Poe --
A slumber did my spirit seal / William Wordsworth --
Alliteration and assonance --
The watch / Frances Cornford --
The splendor falls on castle walls / Alfred, Lord Tennyson --
Rime --
The hippopotamus / Hilaire Belloc --
Leda and the swan / William Butler Yeats --
God's grandeur / Gerard Manley Hopkins --
Desert places / Robert Frost --
How to read a poem aloud --
In memoriam John Coltrane / Michael Stillman --
Writing effectively --
Rhythm --
Stresses and pauses --
Stress and meaning --
Line endings --
We real cool / Gwendolyn Brooks --
Break, break, break / Alfred, Lord Tennyson --
Résumé / Dorothy Parker --
Meter --
Counting-out rhyme / Edna St. Vincent Millay --
When I was one-and-twenty / A.E. Housman --
Beat! beat! drums! / Walt Whitman --
Writing effectively --
Closed form --
The value of form --
Formal patterns --
Days of wine and roses / Ernest Dowson --
Song ("Go and catch a falling star") / John Donne --
Ballads --
Bonny Barbara Allan / Anonymous --
Ballad of Birmingham / Dudley Randall --
The sonnet --
Let me not to the marriage of true minds / William Shakespeare --
What lips my lips have kissed, and where, and why / Edna St. Vincent Millay --
Acquainted with the night / Robert Frost --
Shakespearean sonnet / R.S. Gwynn --
The Facebook sonnet / Sherman Alexie --
The epigram --
Of treason / Sir John Harrington --
Two somewhat different epigrams / Langston Hughes --
Other forms --
Do not go gentle into that good night / Dylan Thomas --
We wear the mask / Paul Laurence Dunbar --
Sestina / Elizabeth Bishop --
Writing effectively --
Open Form --
Ancient stairway / Denise Levertov --
Free verse --
Buffalo Bill's / e.e. cummings --
The dance / William Carlos Williams --
The heart / Stephen Crane --
Cavalry crossing a ford / Walt Whitman --
Thirteen ways of looking at a blackbird / Wallace Stevens --
Prose poetry --
The magic study of happiness / Charles Simic --
For review and further study --
in Just- / e.e. cummings --
I shall paint my nails red / Carole Satyamurti --
I, too / Langston Hughes --
Writing effectively --
Symbol --
The meanings of a symbol --
The Boston Evening Transcript / T.S. Eliot --
The lightning is a yellow fork / Emily Dickinson --
Identifying symbols --
Neutral tones / Thomas Hardy --
Facing it / Yusef Komunyakaa --
Allegory --
The parable of the good seed / Matthew --
Redemption / George Herbert --
Proverbios y cantares (XXIX) / Antonio Machado --
Traveler / translated by Michael Ortiz --
The road not taken / Robert Frost --
Up-hill / Christina Rossetti --
For review and further study --
Wild geese / Mary Oliver --
Popcorn-can cover / Lorine Niedecker --
Anecdote of the jar / Wallace Stevens --
Writing effectively --
Myth and Narrative --
The subjects and uses of myth --
Origins of myth --
Nothing gold can stay / Robert Frost --
The world is too much with us / William Wordsworth --
Helen / H.D. --
Archetype --
Medusa / Louise Bogan --
First love : a quiz / A.E. Stallings --
Personal myth --
The second coming / William Butler Yeats --
Memento mori in middle school / Diane Thiel --
Lady Lazarus / Sylvia Plath --
Myth and popular culture --
Cinderella / Anne Sexton --
Writing effectively --
What is poetry? --
Poems for further reading --
thirteen ways of looking at a tortilla / Aaron Abeyta --
First poem for you / Kim Addonizio --
The powwow at the end of the world / Sherman Alexie --
Last words of the prophet / Anonymous (Navajo chant) --
Dover Beach / Matthew Arnold --
Musée des Beaux Arts / W.H. Auden --
One art / Elizabeth Bishop --
The tyger / William Blake --
the mother / Gwendolyn Brooks --
How do I love thee? let me count the ways / Elizabeth Barrett Browning --
Soliloquy of the Spanish Cloister / Robert Browning --
Dostoevsky / Charles Bukowski --
Quinceañera / Judith Ortiz Cofer --
Kubla Khan / Samuel Taylor Coleridge --
Care and feeding / Billy Collins --
Wild nights, wild nights! / Emily Dickinson --
I felt a funeral, in my brain / Emily Dickinson --
Because I could not stop for death / Emily Dickinson --
Death be not proud / John Donne --
The flea / John Donne --
The love song of J. Alfred Prufrock / T.S. Eliot --
Mending wall / Robert Frost --
Birches / Robert Frost --
Stopping by woods on a snowy evening / Robert Frost --
A supermarket in California / Allen Ginsberg --
The convergence of the twain / Thomas Hardy --
Digging / Seamus Heaney --
Easter wings / George Herbert --
To the virgins, to make much of time / Robert Herrick --
Spring and fall / Gerard Manley Hopkins --
The windhover / Gerard Manley Hopkins --
Loveliest of trees, the cherry now / A.E. Housman --
To an athlete dying young / A.E. Housman --
The Negro speaks of rivers / Langston Hughes --
Harlem [dream deferred] / Langston Hughes --
The death of the ball turret gunner / Randall Jarrell --
Fire on the hills / Robinson Jeffers --
Missed time / Ha Jin --
On my first son / Ben Jonson --
On the death of friends in childhood / Donald Justice --
Ode to a nightingale / John Keats --
Home is so sad / Philip Larkin --
Piano / D.H. Lawrence --
Learning to love America / Shirley Geok-lin Lim --
To his coy mistress / Andrew Marvell --
The Harlem dancer / Claude McKay --
Recuerdo / Edna St. Vincent Millay --
When I consider how my light is spent / John Milton --
We are many / Pablo Neruda, translated by Alastair Reid --
Anthem for doomed youth / Wilfred Owen --
Daddy / Sylvia Plath --
Annabel Lee / Edgar Allan Poe --
The river-merchant's wife : a letter / Ezra Pound --
Naming of parts / Henry Reed --
Miniver Cheevy / Edwin Arlington Robinson --
Song ("When I am dead, my dearest") / Christina Rossetti --
When, in disgrace with fortune and men's eyes / William Shakespeare --
My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun / William Shakespeare --
Ozymandias / Percy Bysshe Shelley --
The emperor of ice-cream / Wallace Stevens --
Ulysses / Alfred, Lord Tennyson --
Fern Hill / Dylan Thomas --
When I heard the learn'd astronomer / Walt Whitman --
O captain! my captain! / Walt Whitman --
Spring and all // William Carlos Williams --
Queen-Anne's-lace / William Carlos Williams --
Composed upon Westminster Bridge / William Wordsworth --
Autumn begins in Martins Ferry, Ohio / James Wright --
In this strange labyrinth / Mary Sidney Wroth --
He wishes for the cloths of heaven / William Butler Yeats --
Sailing to Byzantium / William Butler Yeats --
When you are old / William Butler Yeats --
Drama. Talking with David Ives --
Reading a play --
Interpreting plays --
Theatrical conventions --
Elements of a play --
Trifles / Susan Glaspell --
Analyzing Trifles --
Writing effectively --
Tragedy and comedy --
Tragedy --
(Scene from) Doctor Faustus / Christopher Marlowe --
Comedy --
(Scene from) The importance of being earnest / Oscar Wilde --
Soap opera / David Ives --
Writing effectively --
The theater of Sophocles --
Theater in ancient Greece --
The civic role of Greek drama --
Aristotle's concept of tragedy --
Sophocles --
The origins of Oedipus the King --
Oedipus the King / Sophocles, translated by David Grene --
Writing effectively --
The theater of Shakespeare --
William Shakespeare --
A note on Othello --
Picturing Othello --
Othello, the Moor of Venice / William Shakespeare --
Writing effectively --
The modern theater --
Realism --
A doll's house / Henrik Ibsen, translated by R. Farquharson Sharp, revised by Viktoria Michelsen --
The glass menagerie / Tennessee Williams --
Experimental drama --
The Cuban swimmer / Milcha Sanchez-Scott --
Documentary drama --
(Scenes from) Twilight : Los Angeles, 1992 / Anna Deavere Smith --
Writing effectively --
Plays for further reading --
The sound of a voice / David Henry Hwang --
El Santo Americano / Edward Bok Lee --
Click / Brighde Mullins --
Fences / August Wilson --
Writing. Writing about literature --
Read actively --
Nothing gold can stay / Robert Frost --
Think about the reading --
Plan your essay --
Prewriting : generate ideas and issues --
Sample student prewriting exercises --
Develop your argument --
Strengthen your argument : rhetorical appeals --
Draft your argument --
Revise your argument --
Some final advice on rewriting --
What's your purpose? common approaches to writing about literature --
The form of your finished paper --
Topics for writing --
Writing a research paper --
Browse the research --
Choose a topic : formulate your argument --
Begin your research --
Evaluate your sources --
Organize your research --
Organize your paper --
Maintain academic integrity --
Acknowledge all sources --
Document sources using MLA style --
Concluding thoughts --
Reference guide for MLA citations.
Check nearby libraries
Buy this book
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Subjects
Collections, literature, American Horror tales, American literature, Children's fiction, Classic Literature, Crime, Crime fiction, Detective and mystery stories, Fiction, first-person narrative, Gothic fiction, Homicide, Horror, Horror fiction, Horror stories, Horror tales, Hyperesthesia, Juvenile fiction, Murder, short stories, memory plays, autobiographical drama, Family, American drama, Drama, open_syllabus_project, Young men, Human relations, Brothers and sisters, Mothers and sons, Families, Young women with disabilities, Mothers and daughters, domestic drama, Interpersonal relations, Reading Level-Grade 7, Reading Level-Grade 9, Reading Level-Grade 8, Reading Level-Grade 11, Reading Level-Grade 10, Reading Level-Grade 12, Plays, Criticism and interpretation, Glass menagerie (Williams, Tennessee), Satanism, Puritans, catechism, Devil, Boys, freedom, selfhood, self-fulfilment, meaning of love, short story, class conflict, tradition, change, death, allegory, nonlinear narrative, gentleman's agreements, recluses, Mentally ill women, Literature, collectionsPeople
Amanda Wingfield, Laura Wingfield, Tom Wingfield, Jim O'Connor, Mangan's sister, Goodman Brown, Faith Brown, Goody Cloyse, Devil, Louise Mallard, Brently Mallard, Josephine, Richards, Sartoris Snopes, Abner Snopes, Lennie Snopes, Lizzie, Major de Spain, Mr. Harris, Emily Grierson, Homer Barron, Mr. Grierson, Tobe, Colonel SartorisPlaces
Saint Louis, Missouri, Araby, North Richmond Street, Araby bazaar, New England, Salem Village, Massachusetts, Mallard residence, Justice of the Peace Court, Jefferson, Mississippi, Yoknapatawpha CountyTimes
1600s, 19th century, Antebellum eraEdition | Availability |
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Backpack Literature: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, Drama, and Writing
2016, Pearson
paperback
in English
- fifth edition; student edition, printing (1)
0134586441 9780134586441
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