WELCOME STUDENTS!

This is a place for us to discuss openly and honestly the literature we are reading. Here we are all just communicating our thoughts on what we are reading. There are no right and wrong answers. However, you are expected to be polite, mature, and on topic.

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Summer Reading Selections AP 2014-2015

Welcome to AP English IV for 2014-2015.  I am very excited to have you in my class.  Remember the required books are
A Lesson Before Dying by Ernest Gaines
Montana 1948 by Larry Watson
Also,  remember that you have to read an independent novel from the letter you were given.  Below is a list of the novel that have already been selected by students.
ENJOY!




All Quiet on the Western Front
The Awakening
Beloved
Billy Budd
The Bluest Eye
The Book of Ruth
Brave New World
Catch 22
The Catcher in the Rye
The Color Purple
A Confederacy of Dunces
The Count of Monte Cristo
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime
Daisy Miller 
David Copperfield 
East of Eden
A Farewell to Arms
Great Expectations
The Handmaid's Tale
The Heart is a Lonely Hunter
Invisible Man by Ellison
Jane Eyre
The Kite Runner
The Life of Pi
A Light in August
The Natural 
The Mine and the Well
Old School
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
The Optimist's Daughter
Ordinary People
Ponder Heart
Pride and Prejudice
A Prayer of Owen Meany
The Reader
The Red Badge of Courage
The Road
The Shoemaker's Wife
Snow Falling on Cedars
The Stranger
The Sun Also Rises
Things Fall Apart
This Boy's Life
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
We Were the Mulvaneys
Wuthering Heights

Yellow Raft on Blue Water




Monday, May 12, 2014

Who is among us?

Take this quiz but don't answer the last question with the infinity symbol next to it.  Tell us which character from Lord of the Flies you are most like and if you are surprised.  (Yes, I got Piggy--was there any doubt.)  (The deadline to share is midnight, Tuesday, May 13, 2014.)
http://www.quibblo.com/quiz/8pPwNCc/Lord-of-the-Flies-Personality-Quiz

Sunday, May 11, 2014

And in the end...

In the final lines of Lord of the Flies, Golding writes,  "Ralph wept for the end of innocence, the darkness of a man's heart, and the fall through the air of the true, wise friend called Piggy."  So much has happened to our young protagonist in this island adventure.  Which of the many things that he experiences, do you think has the greatest impact on Ralph?  Explain.  (The deadline to post a response to this blog is midnight Tuesday, May 13, 2014.)

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

KPU Admits Only the Best!

I hope each of you knows just how much you mean to me.  You have made my mornings so much brighter.  I know that you are going to make the world a better place because you certainly have made mine better.  I love you!

Oh, Piggy!

Few people can read Lord of the Flies without getting attached or feeling kinship in some way to Piggy.  What does Piggy represent other than intelligence in the novel?  Why do you think so many readers select him as their favorite character or connect with him?  With that being said, why do you think Golding spends only two paragraphs filled with pig imagery to convey his death?  (The deadline to post a response to this blog question is midnight, May. 7th.)

Monday, May 5, 2014

The Shell and the Glasses

At the end of Chapter 10, Jack and his savages raid the other boys. What does Piggy believe Jack wants? What does this symbolize or reflect about Piggy's views? What, however, does Jack want? How does this reflect his views? What is Golding saying through this raid about the microcosm of the island? (The deadline to post a response to this blog is midnight, Tuesday, May 6, 2014  No credit will be given to plagiarized responses.)

Friday, May 2, 2014

What else is there to do?

"What else is there to do?" These are the final words of Simon in Lord of the Flies.  When he tries to tell the boys what he has discovered on the mountain top, they are frantically chanting and believe him to the be the beast crawling out of the jungle. Why do you think Golding has all the boys, even the littluns, Piggy, Ralph, and Samneric, take part in this murderous event?  What is he saying about society?  (The deadline to post a response to this blog is midnight, May. 4, 2014.)

Thursday, May 1, 2014

Inside the Beast...

Comment on your reaction to Simon's encounter with the Lord of the Flies. Do you think that Simon is hallucinating because of the heat? Remember that Simon is only a young boy, about ten or eleven. Does such a young person usually have the kind of understanding and insight that Simon seems to possess? Do you think the Lord of the Flies's assessment of the other boys's feelings about Simon is accurate? Is there any evidence to support this? Cite it. Do you think the Lord of the Flies's warning that the others will "do" Simon if he tries to interfere is realistic? (The deadline to comment on this blog is midnight, Friday, May 2, 2014.)