AP Literature LA5183 Textbook Page References

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AP Literature – LA5183Textbook Page ReferencesExplanationThe page references in the AP Literature course are based on the 10th edition of the Perrine’sLiterature textbook.Most of the assigned reading selections are also included in the 9th, 11th, 12th, and 13th editions; thisdocument serves to outline the page references for those editions as well.The following selections are exceptions.Not included in the 9th edition: “Weighing the Dog” by Billy Collins“Lady Luncheon Club” by Maya Angelou“God's Grandeur” by Gerard Manley Hopkins“The Aim Was Song” by Robert Frost“To an Athlete Dying Young” by A. E. HousemanNot included in the 11th edition: “Lady Luncheon Club” by Maya Angelou"Yet Do I Marvel” by Countee Cullen“God's Grandeur” by Gerard Manley Hopkins“The Aim Was Song” by Robert Frost“To an Athlete Dying Young” by A. E. HousemanNot included in the 12th edition: “35/10” by Sharon Olds“Spinster” by Sylvia Plath“Lady Luncheon Club” by Maya Angelou“Sorting Laundry” by Elisavietta Ritchie“God's Grandeur” by Gerard Manley Hopkins“The Aim Was Song” by Robert Frost"To an Athlete Dying Young” by A. E. HousemanNot included in the 13th edition: “Lady Luncheon Club” by Maya Angelou“Sorting Laundry” by Elisavietta Ritchie“Yet Do I Marvel” by Countee Cullen“Siren Song” by Margaret Atwood“God's Grandeur” by Gerard Manley Hopkins“The Aim Was Song” by Robert FrostIf a student is using the 9th, 11th, 12th, or 13th edition of Perrine’s Literature, these selections andtheir related activities can be bypassed in the Web Administrator.Copyright Edgenuity Inc.

10th 3Read “Plot and Structure” on pages 103–111 of yourtext, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in your eNotes.103–111104–11297–10497– 104Read “The Destructors” by Graham Greene on pages111–125 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, and takenotes in your eNotes.111–125112–125105–117105–118Read “Characterization” on pages 161–166 of your text,Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in your ��439186–190186–190227–233253–259236– 242240–246251–259278–285260– 438–450Read “Reading the Story” on pages 61–67 of your text,Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in your eNotes.Read “The Most Dangerous Game” by Richard Connellon pages 67–85 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, andtake notes in your eNotes.Read “Hunters in the Snow” by Tobias Wolff on pages8–99 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes inyour eNotes.Read “Everyday Use” by Alice Walker on pages 166–174 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes inyour eNotes.Read “Miss Brill” by Katherine Mansfield on pages 174–179 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes inyour eNotes.Read “Theme” on pages 191–198 of your text, Perrine’sLiterature, and take notes in your eNotes.Read “Once upon a Time” by Nadine Gordimer onpages 231–236 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, andtake notes in your eNotes.Read “Araby” by James Joyce on pages 403–408 ofyour text, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in youreNotes.Read “Point of View” on pages 237–243 of your text,Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in your eNotes.Read “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson on pages 261–269 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes inyour eNotes.Read “Hills Like White Elephants” by Ernest Hemingwayon pages 278–283 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, andtake notes in your eNotes.Read “Symbol, Allegory, and Fantasy” on pages 284–295 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes inyour eNotes.Read “Interpreter of Maladies” by Jhumpa Lahiri onpages 141–159 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, andtake notes in your eNotes.Read “Irony” on pages 334–338 of your text, Perrine’sLiterature, and take notes in your y”)Read “A Good Man Is Hard to Find” by FlanneryO'Connor on pages 420–433 of your text, Perrine’sLiterature, and take notes in your eNotes.454–467446–459445–458Copyright Edgenuity Inc.

10th Ed9th11th12th13thRead “What is Poetry?” on pages 633–640 of your text,Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in your eNotes.647–655657–665680–687706–714Read “Denotation and Connotation” on page 674 of yourtext, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in your eNotes.686–692697–703720–726743–749Read “There is no Frigate like a Book” by EmilyDickinson and the analysis on pages 674–676 of yourtext, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in your eNotes.686–687697–698721–722744Read “Cross” by Langston Hughes on page 682 of yourtext, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in your eNotes.693705726749–750Read “35/10” by Sharon Olds on page 687 of your text,Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in your �761787–788730–731744–745761– 47057277501019102910481068Read “Imagery” on pages 689–692 of your text,Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in your eNotes.Read “Dulce et Decorum Est” by Wilfred Owen on page637 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes inyour eNotes.Read “Living in Sin” by Adrienne Rich on pages 696–697 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes inyour eNotes.Read “Those Winter Sundays” by Robert Hayden onpages 699–700 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, andtake notes in your eNotes.Read “To Autumn” by John Keats on pages 701–702 ofyour text, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in youreNotes.Read “Figurative Language I: Simile, Metaphor,Personification, Apostrophe, and Metonymy” on pages704–715 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, and takenotes in your eNotes.Read “Introduction to Poetry” by Billy Collins on page723 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes inyour eNotes.Read “I Taste a Liquor Never Brewed” by EmilyDickinson on pages 716–717 of your text, Perrine’sLiterature, and take notes in your eNotes.Read “A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning” by JohnDonne on pages 720–721 of your text, Perrine’sLiterature, and take notes in your eNotes.Read “To His Coy Mistress” by Andrew Marvell onpages 721–722 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, andtake notes in your eNotes.Read “Figurative Language II: Symbol and Allegory” onpages 725–737 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, andtake notes in your eNotes.Read “The World Is Too Much with Us” by WilliamWordsworth on page 682 of your text, Perrine’sLiterature, and take notes in your eNotes.Read “I Wandered Lonely As a Cloud” by WilliamWordsworth on page 1015 of your text, Perrine’sLiterature, and take notes in your eNotes.Copyright Edgenuity Inc.

10th Ed9th11th12th13thRead “Fire and Ice” by Robert Frost on page 739 of yourtext, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in your eNotes.746761781806–807Read “Weighing the Dog” by Billy Collins on pages 744–745 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes inyour eNotes.–7679871018–1019Read “Spinster” by Sylvia Plath on page 992 of yourtext, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in your 5–996Read “Figurative Language Ill: Paradox, Overstatement,Understatement, and Irony” on pages 749–759 of yourtext, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in your eNotes.Read “Lady Luncheon Club” by Maya Angelou on pages759–760 in your text, Perrine’s Literature, and takenotes in your eNotes.Read “Sorting Laundry” by Elisavietta Ritchie on pages761–763 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, and takenotes in your eNotes.Read “My Last Duchess” by Robert Browning on pages769–770 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, and takenotes in your eNotes.Read “Allusion” on pages 772–775 of your text,Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in your eNotes.Read “Leda and the Swan” by William Butler Yeats onpages 783–784 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, andtake notes in your eNotes.Read “Sailing to Byzantium” by William Butler Yeats onpages 1017–1018 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, andtake notes in your eNotes.Read “The Second Coming” by William Butler Yeats onpages 1018–1019 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, andtake notes in your eNotes.Read “Yet Do I Marvel” by Countee Cullen on page 777of your text, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in youreNotes.Read “Siren Song” by Margaret Atwood on pages 780–781 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes inyour eNotes.Read “Musical Devices” on pages 818–826 of your text,Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in your eNotes.1021–1022 ��944801818– 819–822–830840–848856–863883–889Read “God's Grandeur” by Gerard Manley Hopkins onpage 824 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, and takenotes in your eNotes.Read “Blow, blow, thou winter wind” by WilliamShakespeare on page 826 of your text, Perrine’sLiterature, and take notes in your eNotes.Read “Traveling through the dark” by William Staffordon pages 833–834 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, andtake notes in your 72898Read “Rhythm and Meter” on pages 835–840 of yourtext, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in your ht Edgenuity Inc.

10th Ed9th11th12th13th854872890–891916–917Read “Had I the Choice” by Walt Whitman on page 852of your text, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in youreNotes.Read “The Aim Was Song” by Robert Frost on pages852–853 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, and takenotes in your eNotes.Read “Old Ladies' Home” by Sylvia Plath on page 854of your text, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in youreNotes.Read “Ozymandias” by Percy Shelley on page 758 ofyour text, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in youreNotes.Read “Ode on a Grecian Urn” by John Keats on pages917–918 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, and takenotes in your –950981–982Read “Sonnet” by Billy Collins on page 793 of your text,Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in your eNotes.798–799814832858Read “To an Athlete Dying Young” by A. E. Housemanon pages 974–975 of your text, Perrine’s Literature andtake notes in your eNotes.–––1039Copyright Edgenuity Inc.

text, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in your eNotes. 686–692 697–703 720–726 743–749 Read “There is no Frigate like a Book” by Emily Dickinson and the analysis on pages 674–676 of your text, Perrine’s Literature, and take notes in your eNotes. 686–687 697–698 721–722 744

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