Sunday, October 20, 2019
AP Literature Reading List 127 Great Books for Your Prep
AP Literature Reading List 127 Great Books for Your Prep  SAT / ACT Prep Online Guides and Tips  A lot of students wonder if thereââ¬â¢s a specific AP English reading list of books they should be reading to succeed on the AP Literature and Composition exam. While thereââ¬â¢s not an official College-Board AP reading list, there are books that will be more useful for you to read than others as you prepare for the exam. In this article, Iââ¬â¢ll break down why you need to read books to prepare, how many you should plan on reading, and what you should read- including poetry.      Why Do You Need to Read Books for the AP Literature Test?  This might seem like kind of an obvious question- you need to read books because itââ¬â¢s a literature exam! But actually, there are three specific reasons why you need to read novels, poems, and plays in preparation for the AP Lit Test.    To Increase Your Familiarity With Different Eras and Genres of Literature  Reading a diverse array of novels, poetry and plays from different eras and genres will help you be familiar with the language that appears in the various passages on the AP Lit examââ¬â¢s multiple choice and essay sections. If you read primarily modern works, for example, you may stumble through analyzing a Shakespeare sonnet. So, having a basic familiarity level with the language of a broad variety of literary works will help keep you from floundering in confusion on test day because youââ¬â¢re seeing a work unlike anything youââ¬â¢ve ever read.    To Improve Your Close-Reading Skills  Youââ¬â¢ll also want to read to improve your close-reading and rhetorical analysis skills. When you do read, really engage with the text: think about what the authorââ¬â¢s doing to construct the novel/poem/play/etc., what literary techniques and motifs are being deployed, and what major themes are at play. You donââ¬â¢t necessarily need to drill down to the same degree on every text, but you should always be thinking, ââ¬Å"Why did the author write this piece this way?â⬠    For the Student Choice Free-Response Question  Perhaps the most critical piece in reading to prepare for the AP Lit test, however, is for the student choice free-response question. For the third question on the second exam section, youââ¬â¢ll be asked to examine how a specific theme works in one novel or play that you choose. The College Board does provide an example list of works, but you can choose any work you like just so long as it has adequate ââ¬Å"literary merit.â⬠ However, you need to be closely familiar with more than one work so that you can be prepared for whatever theme the College Board throws at you!      Want to get a perfect 5 on your AP exam and an A in class?  We can help. PrepScholar Tutors is the world's best tutoring service. We combine world-class expert tutors with our proprietary teaching techniques. Our students have gotten A's on thousands of classes, perfect 5's on AP tests, and ludicrously high SAT Subject Test scores.  Whether you need help with science, math, English, social science, or more, we've got you covered. Get better grades today with PrepScholar Tutors.            Note: Not an effective reading method.    How Many Books Do You Need to Read for the AP Exam?  That depends. In terms of reading to increase your familiarity with literature from different eras and genres and to improve your close-reading skills, the more books you have time to read, the better. Youââ¬â¢ll want to read them all with an eye for comprehension and basic analysis, but you donââ¬â¢t necessarily need to focus equally on every book you read.  For the purposes of the student choice question, however, youââ¬â¢ll want to read books more closely, so that you could write a detailed, convincing analytical essay about any of their themes. So you should know the plot, characters, themes, and major literary devices or motifs used inside and out. Since you wonââ¬â¢t know what theme youââ¬â¢ll be asked to write about in advance, youââ¬â¢ll need to be prepared to write a student choice question on more than just one book.  Of the books you read for prep both in and out of class, choose four to five books that are thematically diverse to learn especially well in preparation for the exam. You may want to read these more than once, and you certainly want to take detailed notes on everything thatââ¬â¢s going on in those books to help you remember key points and themes. Discussing them with a friend or mentor who has also read the book will help you generate ideas on whatââ¬â¢s most interesting or intriguing about the work and how its themes operate in the text.  You may be doing some of these activities anyways for books you are assigned to read for class, and those books might be solid choices if you want to be as efficient as possible. Books you write essays about for school are also great choices to include in your four to five book stable since you will be becoming super-familiar with them for the writing you do in class anyways.  In answer to the question, then, of how many books you need to read for the AP Lit exam: you need to know four to five inside and out, and beyond that, the more the better!      Know the books. Love the books.    What Books Do You Need to Read for the AP Exam?  The most important thing for the student choice free-response question is that the work you select needs to have ââ¬Å"literary merit.â⬠ What does this mean? In the context of the College Board, this means you should stick with works of literary fiction. So in general, avoid mysteries, fantasies, romance novels, and so on.  If youââ¬â¢re looking for ideas, authors and works that have won prestigious prizes like the Pulitzer, Man Booker, the National Book Award, and so on are good choices. Anything you read specifically for your AP literature class is a good choice, too. If you arenââ¬â¢t sure if a particular work has the kind of literary merit the College Board is looking for, ask your AP teacher.  When creating your own AP Literature reading list for the student choice free-response, try to pick works that are diverse in author, setting, genre, and theme. This will maximize your ability to comprehensively answer a student choice question about pretty much anything with one of the works youââ¬â¢ve focused on.  So, I might, for example, choose:      A Midsummer Nightââ¬â¢s Dream, Shakespeare, play, 1605      Major themes and devices: magic, dreams, transformation, foolishness, man vs. woman, play-within-a-play          Wuthering Heights, Emily Bronte, novel, 1847      Major themes and devices: destructive love, exile, social and economic class, suffering and passion, vengeance and violence, unreliable narrator, frame narrative, family dysfunction, intergenerational narratives.          The Age of Innocence, Edith Wharton, novel, 1920      Major themes and devices: Tradition and duty, personal freedom, hypocrisy, irony, social class, family, ââ¬Å"maintaining appearancesâ⬠, honor          Wide Sargasso Sea, Jean Rhys, novel, 1966      Major themes and devices: slavery, race, magic, madness, wildness, civilization vs. chaos, imperialism, gender          As you can see, while there is some thematic overlap in my chosen works, they also cover a broad swathe of themes. They are also all very different in style (although youââ¬â¢ll just have to take my word on that one unless you go look at all of them yourself), and they span a range of time periods and genres as well.  However, while thereââ¬â¢s not necessarily a specific, mandated AP Literature reading list, there are books that come up again and again on the suggestion lists for student choice free-response questions. When a book comes up over and over again on exams, this suggests both that itââ¬â¢s thematically rich, so you can use it to answer lots of different kinds of questions, and that the College Board sees a lot of value in the work.  To that end, Iââ¬â¢ve assembled a list, separated by time period, of all the books that have appeared on the suggested works list for student choice free-response questions at least twice since 2003. While you certainly shouldnââ¬â¢t be aiming to read all of these books (thereââ¬â¢s way too many for that!), these are all solid choices for the student choice essay. Other books by authors from this list are also going to be strong choices. Itââ¬â¢s likely that some of your class reading will overlap with this list, too.  Iââ¬â¢ve divided up the works into chunks by time period. In addition to title, each entry includes the author, whether the work is a novel, play, or something else, and when it was first published or performed. Works are alphabetical by author.      Warning: Not all works pictured included in AP Literature reading list below.    Ancient Works          Title      Author      Genre      Date          Medea      Euripides      play      431 BC          The Odyssey      Homer      epic poem      (no date)          Antigone      Sophocles      play      441 BC          Oedipus Rex      Sophocles      play      429 BC            1500-1799          Title      Author      Genre      Date          Don Quixote      Miguel de Cervantes      novel      1605          Tom Jones      Henry Fielding      novel      1749          As You Like It      Shakespeare      play      1623          Julius Caesar      Shakespeare      play      1599          King Lear      Shakespeare      play      1606          A Midsummer Nightââ¬â¢s Dream      Shakespeare      play      1605          The Merchant of Venice      Shakespeare      play      1605          Othello      Shakespeare      play      1604          The Tempest      Shakespeare      play      16          Candide      Voltaire      novel      1759            1800-1899          Title      Author      Genre      Date          Emma      Jane Austen      novel      1815          Mansfield Park      Jane Austen      novel      1814          Pride and Prejudice      Jane Austen      novel      1813          Jane Eyre      Charlotte Bronte      novel      1847          Wuthering Heights      Emily Bronte      novel      1847          The Awakening      Kate Chopin      novel      1899          The Red Badge of Courage      Stephen Crane      novel      1895          Bleak House      Charles Dickens      novel      1853          David Copperfield      Charles Dickens      novel      1850          Great Expectations      Charles Dickens      novel      1861          Oliver Twist      Charles Dickens      novel      1837          A Tale of Two Cities      Charles Dickens      novel      1859          Crime and Punishment      Fyodor Dostoyevsky      novel      1866          Madame Bovary      Gustave Flaubert      novel      1856          Jude the Obscure      Thomas Hardy      novel      1895          The Mayor of Casterbridge      Thomas Hardy      novel      1886          Tess of the dââ¬â¢Urbervilles      Thomas Hardy      novel      1891          The Scarlet Letter      Nathaniel Hawthorne      novel      1850          A Dollââ¬â¢s House      Henrik Ibsen      play      1879          The American      Henry James      novel      1877          The Portrait of a Lady      Henry James      novel      1881          Moby-Dick      Herman Melville      novel      1851          Frankenstein      Mary Shelley      novel      1818          Anna Karenina      Leo Tolstoy      novel      1877          Adventures of Huckleberry Finn      Mark Twain      novel      1885              The Queen of AP Literature surveys her kingdom.    1900-1939          Title      Author      Genre      Date          My ntonia      Willa Cather      novel      1918          The Cherry Orchard      Anton Chekhov      play      1904          Heart of Darkness      Joseph Conrad      novel      1902          Sister Carrie      Theodore Dreiser      novel      1900          Murder in the Cathedral      T.S. Eliot      play      1935          Absalom, Absalom!      William Faulkner      novel      1936          As I Lay Dying      William Faulkner      novel      1930          Light in August      William Faulkner      novel      1932          The Sound and the Fury      William Faulkner      novel      1929          The Great Gatsby      F. Scott Fitzgerald      novel      1925          A Passage to India      E.M. Forster      novel      1924          The Little Foxes      Lillian Hellman      play      1939          Their Eyes Were Watching God      Zora Neale Hurston      novel      1937          Brave New World      Aldous Huxley      novel      1931          A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man      James Joyce      novel      1916          Billy Budd      Herman Melville      novel      1924          Major Barbara      George Bernard Shaw      play      1905          The Grapes of Wrath      John Steinbeck      novel      1939          The Age of Innocence      Edith Wharton      novel      1920          Ethan Frome      Edith Wharton      novel      19          The House of Mirth      Edith Wharton      novel      1905          Mrs. Dalloway      Virginia Woolf      novel      1925            1940-1969          Title      Author      Genre      Date          Things Fall Apart      Chinua Achebe      novel      1958          Whoââ¬â¢s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?      Edward Albee      play      1962          Another Country      James Baldwin      novel      1962          Waiting for Godot      Samuel Beckett      play      1953          The Plague      Albert Camus      novel      1947          Invisible Man      Ralph Ellison      novel      1952          Lord of the Flies      William Golding      novel      1954          A Raisin in the Sun      Lorraine Hansberry      play      1959          Catch-22      Joseph Heller      novel      1961          One Flew Over the Cuckooââ¬â¢ s Nest      Ken Kesey      novel      1962          A Separate Peace      John Knowles      novel      1959          To Kill a Mockingbird      Harper Lee      novel      1960          The Crucible      Arthur Miller      play      1953          Death of a Salesman      Arthur Miller      play      1949          House Made of Dawn      N. Scott Momaday      novel      1968          Wise Blood      Flannery Oââ¬â¢Connor      novel      1952          1984      George Orwell      novel      1949          Cry, the Beloved Country      Alan Paton      novel      1948          All the Kingââ¬â¢s Men      Robert Penn Warren      novel      1946          The Chosen      Chaim Potok      novel      1967          Wide Sargasso Sea      Jean Rhys      novel      1966          The Catcher in the Rye      JD Salinger      novel      1951          Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead      Tom Stoppard      play      1966          Catââ¬â¢s Cradle      Kurt Vonnegut      novel      1963          The Glass Menagerie      Tennessee Williams      play      1945          A Streetcar Named Desire      Tennessee Williams      play      1947          Black Boy      Richard Wright      memoir      1945          Native Son      Richard Wright      novel      1940              Don't get trapped in a literature vortex!    1970-1989          Title      Author      Genre      Date          Bless Me, Ultima      Rudolfo Anaya      novel      1972          The House on Mango Street      Sandra Cisneros      novel      1984          ââ¬Å"Master Haroldâ⬠ . . . and the boys      Athol Fugard      play      1982          M. Butterfly      David Henry Hwang      play      1988          A Prayer for Owen Meany      John Irving      novel      1989          The Woman Warrior      Maxine Hong Kingston      memoir      1976          Obasan      Joy Kogawa      novel      1981          Beloved      Toni Morrison      novel      1987          The Bluest Eye      Toni Morrison      novel      1970          Song of Solomon      Toni Morrison      novel      1977          Sula      Toni Morrison      novel      1973          Jasmine      Bharati Mukherjee      novel      1989          The Women of Brewster Place      Gloria Naylor      novel      1982          Going After Cacciato      Tim Oââ¬â¢Brien      novel      1978          Equus      Peter Shaffer      play      1973          Ceremony      Leslie Marmon Silko      novel      1977          Sophieââ¬â¢s Choice      William Styron      novel      1979          The Color Purple      Alice Walker      novel      1982          Fences      August Wilson      play      1983          The Piano Lesson      August Wilson      play      1987            1990-Present          Title      Author      Genre      Date          Reservation Blues      Sherman Alexie      novel      1995          The Blind Assassin      Margaret Atwood      novel      2000          Oryx and Crake      Margaret Atwood      novel      2003          The Memory Keeperââ¬â¢s Daughter      Kim Edwards      novel      2005          Cold Mountain      Charles Frazier      novel      1997          Snow Falling on Cedars      David Guterson      novel      1994          The Kite Runner      Khaled Hosseini      novel      2003          A Thousand Splendid Suns      Khaled Hosseini      novel      2007          Never Let Me Go      Kazuo Ishiguro      novel      2005          The Poisonwood Bible      Barbara Kingsolver      novel      1998          The Namesake      Jumpa Lahiri      novel      2004          All the Pretty Horses      Cormac McCarthy      novel      1992          Atonement      Ian McEwan      novel      2001          Native Speaker      Chang Rae-Lee      novel      1995          The God of Small Things      Arundhati Roy      novel      1997          A Thousand Acres      Jane Smiley      novel      1991          The Bonesetterââ¬â¢s Daughter      Amy Tan      novel      2001          The Story of Edgar Sawtelle      David Wroblewski      novel      2008              Don't stay in one reading position for too long, or you'll end up like this guy.      Want to get a perfect 5 on your AP exam and an A in class?  We can help. PrepScholar Tutors is the world's best tutoring service. We combine world-class expert tutors with our proprietary teaching techniques. Our students have gotten A's on thousands of classes, perfect 5's on AP tests, and ludicrously high SAT Subject Test scores.  Whether you need help with science, math, English, social science, or more, we've got you covered. Get better grades today with PrepScholar Tutors.          An Addendum on Poetry  You probably wonââ¬â¢t be writing about poetry on your student choice essay- most just arenââ¬â¢t meaty enough in terms of action and character to merit a full-length essay on the themes when you donââ¬â¢t actually have the poem in front of you (a major exception being The Odyssey). That doesnââ¬â¢t mean that you shouldnââ¬â¢t be reading poetry, though! You should be reading a wide variety of poets from different eras to get comfortable with all the varieties of poetic language. This will make the poetry analysis essay and the multiple-choice questions about poetry much easier!  See this list of poets compiled from the list given on page 14 of the AP Course and Exam Description for AP Lit, separated out by time period. For those poets who were working during more than one of the time periods sketched out below, I tried to place them in the era in which they were more active.  Iââ¬â¢ve placed an asterisk next to the most notable and important poets in the list; you should aim to read one or two poems by each of the starred poets to get familiar with a broad range of poetic styles and eras.    14th-17th Centuries    Anne Bradstreet  Geoffrey Chaucer  John Donne  George Herbert  Ben Jonson  Andrew Marvell  John Milton  William Shakespeare*      18th-19th Centuries    William Blake*  Robert Browning  Samuel Taylor Coleridge*  Emily Dickinson*  Paul Laurence Dunbar  George Gordon, Lord Byron  Gerard Manley Hopkins  John Keats*  Edgar Allan Poe*  Alexander Pope*  Percy Bysshe Shelley*  Alfred, Lord Tennyson*  Walt Whitman*  William Wordsworth*      Early-Mid 20th Century    W. H. Auden  Elizabeth Bishop  H. D. (Hilda Doolittle)  T. S. Eliot*  Robert Frost*  Langston Hughes*  Philip Larkin  Robert Lowell  Marianne Moore  Sylvia Plath*  Anne Sexton*  Wallace Stevens  William Carlos Williams  William Butler Yeats*      Late 20th Century-Present    Edward Kamau Brathwaite  Gwendolyn Brooks  Lorna Dee Cervantes  Lucille Clifton  Billy Collins  Rita Dove  Joy Harjo  Seamus Heaney  Garrett Hongo  Adrienne Rich  Leslie Marmon Silko  Cathy Song  Derek Walcott  Richard Wilbur        You might rather burn books than read them after the exam, but please refrain.    Key Takeaways  Why do you need to read books to prepare for AP Lit? For three reasons:  #1: To become familiar with a variety of literary eras and genres#2: To work on your close-reading skills#3: To become closely familiar with four-five works for the purposes of the student choice free-response essay analyzing a theme in a work of your choice.  How many books do you need to read? Well, you definitely need to get very familiar with four-five for essay-writing purposes, and beyond that, the more the better!  Which books should you read? Check out the AP English Literature reading list in this article to see works that have appeared on two or more ââ¬Å"suggested worksâ⬠ lists on free-response prompts since 2003.  And donââ¬â¢t forget to read some poetry too! See some College Board recommended poets listed in this article.    What's Next?  See my expert guide to the AP Literature test for more exam tips!  The multiple-choice section of the AP Literature exam is a key part of your score. Learn everything you need to know about it in our complete guide to AP Lit multiple-choice questions.  Taking other APs? Check out our expert guides to the AP Chemistry exam, AP US History, AP World History, AP Psychology, and AP Biology.  Looking for other book recommendation lists from PrepScholar? We've compiled lists of the 7 books you must read if you're a pre-med and the 31 books to read before graduating high school.      Want to improve your SAT score by 160 points or your ACT score by 4 points? We've written a guide for each test about the top 5 strategies you must be using to have a shot at improving your score. Download it for free now:           
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