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Parents and Students: We wish you an enjoyable and relaxing summer. Reading over the summer should not only benefit you academically, but it should also be fun. We have included your 2017 summer reading list. Each student in grades 7-12 is required to read two books, one book selection is chosen for you and for the other you will have some choice. Each reading list includes a description of what will be expected of you when you return to school. Reading is vitally important to academic achievers. By sixth grade, summer reading loss alone would create an 18 month reading gap. Simply by enjoying a few good books suggested by your instructor, and stretching the capacity of the mind over the summer, you will enter the school year better prepared for academic success. Please enjoy the reading. Remember it is a choice. Be mindful of making choices that you and your family see as stories which will both expand your knowledge and contribute to an understanding of your faith and values. Take time to choose something that you will both learn from and find pleasurable. Go to the library, the bookstore or online. Take time to review the books like you might a new movie. Read what others have said about it and read the description of the book. It s also a good idea to read a paragraph from anywhere in the book. If any part of it interests you, it might be a good choice. Sometimes it is the language used, sometimes it is the plot, but always we can recognize something we like or don t like. Use this time and this list to continue fostering your reading habits. We at First Baptist want to grow lifelong readers. Have a wonderful summer and we will see you in August. Regards, Melissa Clark English Department Chair

Name Grade Level Summer Reading One Pager Title Author Choose any two of the following sentence starters and write a brief reflection for each. Attach your typed reflection in MLA format to this sheet: I noticed I wonder I was reminded of I think I m surprised that I d like to know I realized If I were The central issue is One consequence of could be If, then I m not sure Although it seems, Academic Honesty By signing below, I am indicating that I read the summer reading assignment and the work submitted is my own. Signature of student Date

Rising 7 th Grade Summer Reading List English 7 / Mrs. Murphy ALL RISING 7 th GRADE STUDENTS MUST READ (at least) 2 BOOKS THIS SUMMER, but please do keep track of all books you read. Anyone who reads more books than Mrs. Murphy will win a prize 1. Required for ALL: The Boy Who Dared by Susan Campbell Bartoletti There will be an assessment on this novel at the beginning of the school year. 2. Fiction Choose 1 of the following books or choose another book by one of the authors listed below: Across Five Aprils (Hunt) The Book Thief (Zusak) Fever 1783 (Anderson) Crash (Spinelli) Hoot (Hiaasen) Taking Sides (Soto) True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle (Avi) Hoops (Myers) Chains (Halse Anderson) The Red Pony (Steinbeck) The Yearling (Rawlings) Anne of Green Gables (Montgomery) Sunwing (Kenneth Oppel) *(or another book in this series) For book #2, please complete the TYPED one-pager assignment as exactly as explained on the next page.

Summer Reading general guidelines and MLA Format procedures: (to be used with book #2 only) 1. Open a Word document 2. Font tab - Change font to Times New Roman, size 12 pt. 3. Paragraph tab choose double line spacing 4. Page Layout tab be sure your margins are 1 (normal) 5. Type your name, teacher s name, class and date (day, month, year) in the top left: Great Student Mrs. Murphy English 7 25 August 2015 6. Type your brief reflections please know that brief reflection should be AT LEAST 5-8 sentences (standard paragraph form) and should contain AT LEAST 2 specific details from the book. Each paragraph should begin with a prompt from the One Pager handout. 7. Fill out and attach the One Pager handout to the front of each. 8. If you have poor handwriting, consider typing the One Pager information after your reflections (pages, rating, purpose, etc.) 9. REREAD what you have written to check for clarity, omissions, and grammatical errors. 10. Turn in accurate and appropriate work on the due date.

Rising 8th Grade Summer Reading List All rising eight grade students must read (at least) 2 books this summer. Required for ALL: Ender s Game, by Orson Scott Card Choose 1 of the following that you have NOT read (please note options re: author): Homecoming or any novel by Cynthia Voight Rumblefish or any novel by S.E. Hinton The Hero and the Crown or any novel by Robin McKinley The Letter Writer or any novel by Ann Rinaldi The Book of 1,000 Days or any novel by Shannon Hale Sunrise Over Fallujah or any novel by Walter Dean Myers The Angel Experiment or any novel by James Patterson The Black Pearl or any novel by Scott O Dell The Chocolate War or any novel by Robert Cormier Maniac McGee or any novel by Jerry Spinelli The House of the Scorpion or any novel by Nancy Farmer Follow the attached instructions for your type written response. You don't have to burn books to destroy a culture. Just get people to stop reading them. Ray Bradbury The man who does not read has no advantage over the man who cannot read. Mark Twain Summer Reading general guidelines and MLA Format procedures: Open a Word document Font tab - Change font to Times New Roman, size 12 pt. Paragraph tab choose double line spacing Page Layout tab be sure your margins are 1 (normal) Type your name, teacher s name, class and date (day, month, year) in the top left: Student Name Teacher Name (Mr. Helms)

English 8 25 August 2016 Type your 2 brief reflections please know that a brief reflection should be AT LEAST 5-8 sentences (standard paragraph form) and should contain AT LEAST 2 specific details from the book. Fill out and attach the One Pager handout to the front of each typed one pager. REREAD what you have written to check for clarity, omissions, and grammatical errors. 9th Grade American Literature Summer Reading Required: 2 Books 1. The Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet by Jamie Ford *All 9th graders will be tested on their basic knowledge of the plot, characters, and theme of this novel during the first few weeks of school. We will use this novel in class to begin our literature study in August. 2. Choose 1 book historical fiction or non-fiction related to the Civil War. It can be a biography or autobiography written during the Civil War era, or fiction based on the Civil War era. It must be Grade 9 or above reading level. **All 9th graders will be required to present a "novel bag" presentation (guidelines will be given in class) during the first week of school on the book of their choice. A few suggestions... (You do not have to choose directly from this list.) The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain A Diary from Dixie by Mary Boykin Chesnut The Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane Letters from a Slave Girl: The Story of Harriet Jacobs by Mary E. Lyons Hear the Wind Blow by Mary Downing Hahn Across Five Aprils by Irene Hunt

10th Grade World Literature Summer Reading Read one title from the following list and choose one of your own. If you think you may be interested in AP, consider googling the AP list and select a title there. Write a 2-page response on one of the books below in this fashion: Choose a character from the story and write your response in first person from that character s point of view. You can construct your piece any way you choose, but be sure to include some element of plot or point of reference in the story, how the character sees himself or other characters, what this character comes to realize as a result of his experience. DO NOT organize a paper that simply lists these three things. Be creative and let your character come to life in a unique way through your capable hands. [If you happen to have forgotten what first person means, that means you actually become the character and use the I pronoun.] McLean A River Runs Through It McCarthy All the Pretty Horses Martel Life of Pi Tan The Joy Luck Club Smith A Tree Grows in Brooklyn Clements Things Not Seen Crane The Red Badge of Courage Frazier Cold Mountain Zusak I am the Messenger Larson The Devil in the White City Non Fiction: Krakauer Into Thin Air Albom Tuesdays with Morrie

11 th Grade - AP Literature Summer Reading: Students in AP have already specifically registered and been selected for this course. The following four titles are required: How to Read Literature Like a Professor, Thomas Foster Take your time reading this one to absorb it. You will each be assigned chapters so you can show a particular literary analysis technique at work in the books you are reading. Chapters will be assigned first week of class. Great Expectations, Charles Dickens If you haven't encountered Dickens before, hang in there. He is well worth the effort and you will never forget the likes of Pip or Joe Gargery or Miss Havisham. Night (I'm adding this since we didn't read it) Weisel You just can t miss this extraordinary memoir of Elie Weisel who was imprisoned in the Nazi camps at age 14. He just died this past year and lived a life proclaiming the need to NEVER FORGET what happened to the millions who lost their lives at the hands of unspeakable evil and suffering. War and Peace, Leo Tolstoy I am also reading War and Peace for the first time so we will labor together. I will set up a blog for this so we can stay focused and make sure that we understand as we go. This book is daunting and it s probably one of the most famous books that people talk about but never read. Now you can be among the elite if you hang in there. Instruction: It is important that you read How to Read Literature Like a Professor first. It is basically a very well-written, funny handbook on, well, how to read literature. Mr. Foster will point out the things you should be looking for when you pick up a piece of literature. No matter how much you think you know about doing that, let me assure, you don t know enough. All students enjoy this book and so will you but you need to get it right away so you can get through it before you start to tackle the fiction. This summer reading list is dense and requires discipline. It is not for the faint of heart. Only students who are serious about AP Lit will have the impetus and stamina to conquer it. It is a good indication of the nature of this class. Lots of reading, thinking, and writing. Annotate all books as you read. That may mean you simply underline passages you deem

significant, scratch down notes in the margin, or dogear a place you think you might like to return. The main thing is to be diligent in your reading and not wait til the last minute. These works take time to absorb. Enjoy this reading for its own sake this summer. There is no writing assignment. However, your annotations should have you prepared for one as soon as you return. Enjoy and think, but hold your thoughts until August when you will have the opportunity to spill your insights upon the page. Reading quizzes are always a possibility, but no vocab this time. AP EXTRA CREDIT: Since many of you are avid readers you may want to Google the AP reading list just to see what titles are there. This is a huge list and may provide you with selections from which you can choose another book you ve always wanted to read but have never had the time. I realize, of course, that the required reading list may be all your interested in tackling this summer, especially as you labor through the great Russian novel. That is fine. Just perusing the AP reading list will open your eyes to the literature that is held in esteem from a critical point of view. Choosing a fifth title will allow you to start the semester with an extra credit 100 in the grade book. The other four titles are required and you cannot substitute for any of them. [OPTIONAL] AP English Literature Crash Course Manual, Dawn Hogue This one is an overview of course with book lists, categories of analysis, etc. We will cover all of this in class apart from the book but if you want to peruse the scope of the course before you get in it, this is the summary.

11th Grade British Literature Summer Reading (NON-AP Students) Required: 2 Books 1. 1. Frankenstein, Mary Shelley (Please thoroughly read this book and annotate while reading! We will dive into this book upon return to class in August. You will be assigned a short project on this particular novel.) At once a Gothic thriller, a passionate romance, and a cautionary tale about the dangers of science, Frankenstein tells the story of committed science student Victor Frankenstein. Obsessed with discovering the cause of generation and life and bestowing animation upon lifeless matter, Frankenstein assembles a human being from stolen body parts but; upon bringing it to life, he recoils in horror at the creature s hideousness. Tormented by isolation and loneliness, the onceinnocent creature turns to evil and unleashes a campaign of murderous revenge against his creator, Frankenstein. 2. Choose 1 biography of a BRITISH PERSON This can be anyone from Winston Churchill to David Beckham to Sid Vicious but YOU must verify their nationality!! You will be required to give a presentation in class to present your chosen biography to your classmates. Above and Beyond: You don't have to burn books to destroy a culture. Just get people to stop reading them. Ray Bradbury The man who does not read has no advantage over the man who cannot read. Mark Twain

Dual Credit & Honors English 12 Summer Reading Required reading: All students must read 2 books (1 choice & 1 required.) Assessment Required Book: When we return to school students will complete a unit on Camus and existentialism. Assessment Choice Book: Students will be required to complete a project. The guidelines will be given the first week of school. Students should read for pleasure, annotating anything interesting or anything that needs clarification. Required: The Stranger, Albert Camus Choice Book: Students may choose any book, fiction or non-fiction, dealing with a foreign culture; students may not choose anything from North American or British culture. The goal here is to read about a people/culture/region of the world that is unfamiliar to you. Students may choose from the selected list below, or find their own selection. Examples including but not limited to these books: Korea The Orphan Master s Son, by Adam Johnson Without You, There Is No Us: My Time with the Sons of North Korea's Elite, Suki Kim Nothing to Envy: Ordinary Lives in North Korea Barbara Demick Escape from Camp 14: One Man's Remarkable Odyssey from North Korea to Freedom in the West Blaine Harden Somewhere Inside: One Sister's Captivity in North Korea and the Other's Fight to Bring Her Home Laura Ling Middle East Afghanistan The Kiterunner Khaled Hosseini A Thousand Splendid Suns Khaled Hosseini Egypt Arabian Nights and Days, Naguib Mahfouz Akhenaten, Naguib Mahfouz

Iran The Complete Persepolis, Marjane Satrapi, Latin America, Guatamala I, Rigoberta Menchu: An Indian Woman in Guatemala, Rigoberta Menchu Nigeria Americanah, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie