I am teaching American Lit this year (been on hiatus from English for 3 years), and I am super-excited. But I need help figuring out what novels we should read. My choices are limited to classics that the school is willing to order for the whole department, so nothing obscure. Because Arizona's curriculum sucks, we have precious little time for novels (most of the year will be excerpts & short stories).
Which of the following 3-4 novels do you think are most interesting & important kids (jr. level)? Any other suggestions?
1. Steinbeck -- Of Mice & Men or The Grapes of Wrath
2. Hemingway -- The Sun Also Rises or A Farewell to Arms or The Old Man & The Sea
3. Salinger -- The Catcher In the Rye (not positive the kids are allowed to read this )
4. Hurston -- Their Eyes Were Watching God
5. Hawthorne -- The Scarlet Letter
6. Miller -- Death of a Salesman
7. Chandler -- The Big Sleep
8. Fitzgerald -- The Great Gatsby
9. James -- Portrait of a Lady or The Turn of the Screw
10. Fante -- Ask the Dust
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I always hated the Scarlet Letter, although the plot seems exciting enough, I found Hwathorne's writing to be dry and uninteresting. I love love Arthur Miller, i recommend The Crucible also. You HAVE to teach Their Eyes Were Watching God, excellent pick, although it is more or less a 'chick' book. I was also never a huge fan of Hemingway, but I did enjoy a Farewell to Arms. The Great GAtsby is also another great one, i love the 20s and the tragicness of Daisy. I do hope you will get to teach Catcher in the Rye, it is a classic, and kids these days are exposed to far worse than that. I'll get back to you on maybe some other books for consideration...I have to think about it for a minute. Good picks though!!
I put in my vote for anything by Steinbeck and The Great Gatsby. The Catcher in the Rye is my favorite, so I'd pick that one too.
Actually I like almost all of your picks. However, IMHO, Portrait of a Lady is possibly be the most boring book every written. I know many love it, but I have to insert my opinion because I feel pretty strongly about this one.
i also vote for of mice and men, i loved the book and its nice and short. always a plus when i was in high school. hehe.
edit* question: how current can the books be? i loved it when my American Lit teacher in H.S. had one book where we got to pick it from a modern day author (of our choice, she did have to approve it though--i chose snow falling on cedars by david guterson, way b4 the movie ever came out, the book is sooooooo much better), we also read the joy luck club.
I vote for GG (its my fav book so I guess I am bias!!). I also preferred Of Mice and Men. What about an Bronte novel? I loved Weathering Heights. Most guys in my class seemed to like it as well.
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I LOVE the grapes of wrath and the great gatsby. When i took english we had to do these huge projects on them which made me have a greater apperication for the books. I hated the scarlet letter, it was such a bore to me. One that i read that i wasen't fond of but it taught a lot was the red badge of courage. It is good in a sense for descriptive writing.
and a book called the Giver. I can't remember who it is by but when I was 13 or 14 that book really moved me. Old Man in the sea is more high school then jounior high. at least we read it in the 10th grade.
They have got to read The Grapes of Wrath!! Great book. My friends and I still say we are t'ard, so t'ard. I would also choose Hemingway but my fave is A Moveable Feast even though it is not the greatest one for class discussion. So, The Old Man and the Sea it is!! And Gatsby always works out well.
It is hard to tell from your original post, but are these students in junior high OR juniors in high school? A lot of these books seem to be high-school level, so I will assume you meant they are juniors in HS.
In school I read "Catcher," and it is still one of my favorites. I think "Grapes of Wrath" is also a good choice, or "Mice and Men" if you are looking for a shorter book. "Huck Finn" and "Scarlet Letter" would also be good choices.
I must say, I absolutely hated hated hated "Old Man and the Sea." So I would not recommend that, but I am obviously biased.
What about having the students choose one of their own classics to read? My sophomore English teacher did that and I read "Crime and Punishment," which is also one of my favorites. She then gave us general questions about the books we read. It made it a lot harder for her to grade them, but it was one of the best assignments I ever had. I know I never would have read it if I didn't have to but I am so glad I did. Hmm, it might be harder to do that with American Lit only...but just an idea.
hmm I hated American Lit. I found it to be awful. I just didn't like Steinbeck or Fitzgerald.
I did and still do love Hemingway. I thought The Sun Also Rises was a very interesting novel and the best of the ones I read. I got halfway through The Old Man and the Sea before I threw it back on the shelf. I hated it.
The Great Gatsby will be ok if you plan on going through all the symbolism with them. I never understood that book and never got all the symbolism so that may be a difficult book for some if you don't go through stuff with them.
I loved The Catcher in the Rye but I think it is a banned book in most places and I don't know if they would be willing to buy a lot of copies especially if you aren't teaching english next year.
I remember reading Their Eyes Were Watching God but I can't tell you what it was about.
Isn't The Glass Megangerie a play? If you you should include one because most people enjoy reading plays and I remember Junior year was the one year in high school we didn't read any.
oohhh...junior year English was my favorite in HS! (even though we had to spend the summer reading Moby Dick) talk about torture...I was in Honors English so that's why. hehe, us literary nerds. I loved The Great Gatsby. I got really into it because of all the symbolism. I remember getting extra credit because I found a reference to Gatsby's shirts in the J.Crew catalog. how nerdy is that!?!
I really enjoyed Steinbeck's Grapes of Wrath too. I remember reading Of Mice and Men sophomore year so I don't know if that's considered jr. level? Well, regardless, both were great reads.
You should read some sort of play too. I remember my class having lots of fun acting out scenes from The Crucible and Death of Salesman- especially The Crucible.
Hemingway would be cool too. I liked The Sun Also Rises. His style takes getting used to but I love it. We had some sort of contest where we had to write a one page story where we imitated his style.
I would definitely add The Crucible to your list...that was one of my favorites and it's a story that kids will be interested in while still having a fun topic.
Also, Of Mice & Men was great.
I read Old Man & The Sea in 8th grade and I love it.
The Sun Also Rises was great also.
Those my opinions. HTH!
BTW, why is Cather In The Rye banned? I never read it.
sun also rises, gatsby, and scarlet letter definately. These are the few books that I actually got all the way through in hish school and LOVED. Sun Also Rises is one of my favorite books.
Also, a little obscure, but the Awakening had a lot of impact of most of my class- we read it in either 11th or 12th grade.
Other ideas: 'An Enemy of the People' or 'A Doll House'
Oh, I also just took an african american lit class and I think some of those writings are SO important to american literature beacause those are the people who literally built America.These authors are good: Hurston, Douglas, Du Bois, Locke, Chestnutt.