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Summer
2008 Required Reading
Each 12R
student is required to read one book from the fiction list
and one from the non-fiction list. Students are required
to keep a Reading Log which will be used and collected as part of the
summer reading assessment in September. The Reading Log should include
quotes, notes, interpretations, and student responses.
FICTION
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Albom,
Mitch - The Five People You Meet in Heaven
Eddie
dies and awakes in the afterlife, where he learns that heaven is
not a destination. It's a place where your life is explained to
you by five people, some of whom you knew, others who may have been
strangers.
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Brashares,
Ann - The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants
Four
best girlfriends spend the biggest summer of their lives enchanted
and connected by a magical pair of pants. |
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Chopin,
Kate - The Awakening
Edna Pontellier, a young wife and mother, experiences the first pangs
of passion and desire--an awakening so intense that Edna compromises
herself--changing her life forever.
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Dostoevsky,
Fyodor - Crime and Punishment
A poverty-stricken young man is faced with an opportunity to solve
his financial problems with one simple but horrifying act.
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Evanovich,
Janet - One for the Money
Bail-bonds apprehension agent Stephanie Plum--a New Jersey bounty
hunter with an attitude--pursues a former vice cop with whom she shares
a sordid history and a powerful chemistry.
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Hesse,
Herman - Siddhartha
Siddhartha, a young man, leaves his family for a contemplative
life, then, restless, discards it for one of the flesh. He conceives
a son, but bored and sickened by lust and greed, moves on again. Near
despair, Siddhartha comes to a river where he hears a unique sound.
This sound signals the true beginning of his life. |
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Kinsella,
Sophie - Confessions of a Shopaholic
Becky
Bloomwood is bored to death writing for Successful Saving. So, with
a handsome credit line from her bank, she liberates herself the best
way she knows how -- by shopping! Think of it as an investment, she
tells herself. But, soon she is buried in bank notices and cursed
VISA bills.
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Morrison,
Toni - Paradise
In 1976, in rural Oklahoma, nine men from the nearby town of Ruby
attack a former convent now occupied by women fleeing from abusive
husbands or lovers, or otherwise unhappy pasts--"women who chose
themselves for company,'' whose solidarity and solitude rebuke the
male-dominated culture that now exacts its revenge.
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Rand,
Ayn - The Fountainhead
The story of a inflexible young architect, his violent battle against
conventional standards, and his explosive love affair with a beautiful
woman who struggles to defeat him.
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Schlink,
Bernhard - The Reader
A fifteen-year-old boy, Michael Berg becomes embroiled in a passionate,
clandestine love affair with an older woman, an event that has a profound
impact on his life, especially years later, when he, now a law student,
encounters her as a criminal on trial. |
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Shakespeare,
William - The Taming of the Shrew
This play deals with love and marriage. Lucentio cannot marry the
pleasant Bianca until her sister Kate - the shrew - is married. Petruchio
agrees to court Kate, for a handsome dowry. So Petruchio begins the
process of taming Kate. |
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Shakespeare,
William - The Tempest
Exiled by his evil brother, Prospero (the rightful Duke of Milan)
seeks to regain his title. Using his magic powers, he creates the
"tempest"
and draws the ship bearing King Alonso and Duke Antonio to his enchanted
island.
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Silva,
Daniel - The Mark of the Assassin
Set in London, Cairo, Amsterdam, and Washington, the story line follows
CIA case agent Michael Osbourne as he attempts to locate the terrorists
who shot down an airliner off the coast of Long Island. |
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Tan,
Amy - The Kitchen God's Wife
A Chinese emigre mother tells her American-born daughter the
story of her old life in the war-torn China of the 1940's. |
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Vonnegut,
Kurt - Cat's Cradle
Filled with humor and unforgettable characters, this apocalyptic
story tells of Earth's ultimate end, and presents a vision of the
future that is both darkly fantastic and funny, as Vonnegut weaves
a satirical commentary on modern man and his madness.
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Yolen,
Jane & Coville, Bruce - Armageddon Summer
Fourteen-year-old Marina and sixteen-year-old Jed accompany their
parents' religious cult, the Believers, to await the end of the world
atop a remote mountain, where they try to decide what they themselves
believe. |
NON-FICTION
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Albom,
Mitch - Tuesdays With Morrie
A Detroit sportswriter conveys the wisdom and life lessons of his
late mentor, professor Morrie Schwartz, recounting their weekly conversations
as Schwartz lay dying. |
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Ashe,
Arthur - Days of Grace
The late tennis champion, activist, and AIDS victim remembers his
experiences in the segregated South of his youth, his triumphs on
the court, his family and religious life, and his struggle with his
disease. |
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Brokaw,
Tom - The Greatest Generation
One of NBC's most famous anchormen celebrates the greatest generation
in history--Americans born in the 1920s who came of age during the
Great Depression, fought in World War II, and went on to build America.
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Brown,
Dee - Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee
Fully documented account of the systematic destruction of the American
Indian during the second half of the 19th century.
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Campbell,
Joseph - The Power of Myth
This book, written in question-and-answer format, touches on
subjects from modern marriage to virgin births, from Jesus to John
Lennon, translating events into
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Gates,
Bill with Collins Hemingway - Business @ the Speed Of
Thought
Bill Gates discusses how technology can help run businesses better
today and how it will transform the nature of business in the near
future. Gates stresses the need for managers to view technology not
as overhead but as a strategic asset, and offers detailed examples
from Microsoft, GM, Dell, and many other successful companies. |
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Goleman,
Daniel - Emotional Intelligence
Based on the most recent studies in psychology and neuroscience, a
report on the rational and emotional properties of the human mind
explains how they shape everything from personal success to physical
well being. |
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Hawking,
Stephen - A Brief History of Time
Among the topics covered in this book are gravity, black holes, the
Big Bang, the nature of time, and physicists' search for a grand unifying
theory. |
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Hillenbrand,
Laura - Seabiscuit:
An American Legend
The
story of one horse's journey from also-ran to national luminary. Seabiscuit:
an American legend is an inspiring tale of unlikely heroes, a classic
story of three embattled individuals overcoming the odds in the Great
Depression.
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Junger,
Sebastian - The Perfect Storm
Meteorologists called the storm that hit North America's eastern
seaboard in October 1991 a "perfect storm" because of the
rare combination of factors that created it. For everyone else, it
was perfect hell. |
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King,
Jr., Dr. Martin Luther - Stride Toward Freedom
Chronicles the Montgomery, Alabama bus boycott sparked by Mrs. Rosa
Parks' refusal to give up her seat to a white male, describing the
plans and problems of a nonviolent campaign, reprisals by the white
community, and the eventual attainment of desegrated city bus service.
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McCourt,
Frank - Angela's Ashes
The autobiography discusses how a Brooklyn boy returns to the slums
of Limerick, Ireland with his immigrant parents. |
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McCourt,
Frank - 'Tis: A Memoir
In the sequel to Angela's Ashes, Frank McCourt shares his story
as an impoverished immigrant to his career as a teacher. |
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Nien,
Cheng - Life and Death in Shanghai
Cheng, now a U. S. resident, tells of her persecution and
imprisonment during China's "Cultural Revolution" under
Chairman Mao. |
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Noble,
Christina - Bridge Across My Sorrows
Noble's tale of her own broken childhood and her chosen mission to
help street children and orphans in Vietnam. |
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Pelzer,
Dave - A Child Called "It"
This book is a brief, biographical account of one child's courage
to survive the bizarre tortures a mother inflicted on her son, told
from the point of view of the author as a young boy. |
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Scheindlin,
Judy - Beauty Fades, Dumb is Forever
Author, "Judge Judy" draws liberally upon her own experiences
as both a family court judge and television judge to illustrate her
basic point that women must have their own dreams and not lose themselves
in relationships that strip them of their individuality.
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Stanley,
Thomas, J. - The Millionaire Next Door
This expose of America's rich and how they achieved their wealth and
status exposes the myth of inherited wealth and instead reveals that
hard work, living below one's means, and diligent savings are more
often the creators of true wealth. |
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Steinbeck,
John - Travels With Charley
With his dog Charley, John Steinbeck set out in his truck to
explore and experience America in the 1960s.
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Turow,
Scott - One L
Memoirs adapted from the author's diary chronicle his emotionally
and intellectually challenging first year in law school and records
the fierce and sometimes hysterical competition that is faced by Harvard
Law School students . |
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