AP US HISTORY READING LIST

You can read a book and do a book critique each six weeks. You may read 3 books for the first semester from the colonial period to 1877. The second semester will be comprised of the books pertaining to the time period after 1877. The book critique will be due at the end of the fifth week of each six weeks. Each book critique that you do will earn extra credit points for the six weeks average.

COLONIAL PERIOD TO 1877

Addams, Jane Twenty Years at Hull House

Ambrose, Stephen Undaunted Courage

America

Axtell, James: The Invasion Within-The Contest of Cultures in Colonial North

Blassingame, John: The Slave Community

Boyer, Paul Salem Possessed: The Social Origins of Witchcraft

Crane, Stephen The Red Badge of Courage

Cronin, William Changes in the Land

Dangerfield, George: The Era of Good Feelings

De Tocqueville, Alexis Democracy in America

DePauw, Linda Grant Remember the Ladies: Women in America, 1720-1815

Edmund, Morgan The Puritan Dilemma: The Story of John Winthrop

Edmunds, R. David The Shawnee Prophet

Ehle, John Trail of Tears: The Rise and Fall of the Cherokee Nation

Eisenhower, John S.D. So Far from God: The US War with Mexico

Elkins, Stanley Slavery-A Problem in American Institutional and Intellectual Life

Ellis, Joseph The Founding Brothers

Fast, Howard April Morning

Fehrenbacher, Don The Slaveholding Republic

Foote, Shelby The Civil War trilogy- Three volumes

Forbes, Esther Paul Revere and the World He lived in

Freeman, Joanne Affairs of Honor

Gaustad, Edwin The Great Awakening in New England

Genovese, Eugene Roll Jordan Roll: The World the Slaves Made

Gilpin, Drew Mothers of Invention

Gross, Robert The Minutemen and Their World

Hatthaway, Herman How the North Won

Jacobs, Harriet Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl

Jakes, John The Rebels

Karlsen, Carol The Devil in the Shape of a Woman: Witchcraft in Colonial New England

Labaree, Benjamin The Boston Tea Party

Marshall, Peter The Light and the Glory

McCullough, David John Adams

McPherson, James Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era

McPherson, James Ordeal by Fire: The Civil War and Reconstruction

Michener, James Chesapeake

Michener, James Legacy

Morison, Samuel E. Admiral of the Ocean: A Life of Christopher Columbus

Oates, Stephen With Malice Toward None-A Life of Abraham Lincoln

Paludan, Phillip A People’s Contest

Potter, David The Impending Crisis 1848-1861

Roberts, Harvey A Few Bloody Noses

Shaara, Jeff Gods and Generals

Shaara, Jeff The Last Full Measure

Shaara, Michael Killer Angels

Sklar, Katherine Catherine Beecher: A Study in American Domesticity

Smiley, Jane All-True Travels and Adventures of Lide Newton

Sneden, Robert Eye of the Storm

Stampp, Kenneth: The Peculiar Institution

Stowe, Harriet Beecher Uncle Tom’s Cabin

Ulrich, Thatcher Good Wives: Image and Reality in the Lives of Women in Northern New England 1650-1750

Weinberg, Albert: Manifest Destiny

Wiley, Bell Irvin Life of Billy Yank

Wiley, Bell Irvin Life of Johnny Reb

Woodward, C. Vann: The Strange Career of Jim Crow

Young, Alfred The Shoemaker and the Tea Party

1877 TO Present

Allen, Frederick Only Yesterday

Allen, Frederick Since Yesterday

Ambrose, Stephen Band of Brothers

Ambrose, Stephen D-day

Ambrose, Stephen Nothing Like it in the World: The Building of the Transcontinental Railroad

Ambrose, Stephen The Victor

Beals, Melba Pattillo Warriors Don’t Cry

Bell, Thomas Out of This Furnace: A Novel of Immigrant Labor in America

Brown, Dee Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee

Caputo, Philip A Rumor of War

Cather, Willa My Antonia

Chafe, William A History of Our Time

DuBois, W.E.B. The Souls of Black Folks

Griffin, John Howard Black Like Me

Hemingway, Ernest For Whom The Bell Tolls

Herring, George America’s Longest War, The United States in Vietnam

Hersey, John Hiroshima

Hurston, Zora Neale Their Eyes were Watching God

Larson, Eric Devil in the White City

Leckie, Robert Delivered From Evil

Lewis, Sinclair Elmer Gantry

McCullough, David Brave Companions

McCullough, David Johnstown Flood

McCullough, David Path Between the Seas: The Creation of the Panama Canal 1870-1914

McCullough, David The Great Bridge

McCullough, David Truman

McElvaine, Robert The Great Depression

Military Frontier

Morris, Edmund Theodore Rex

Riis, Jacob How the Other Half Lives

Royster, Jacqueline Jones Southern Horrors and other Writings: The Anti-Lynching Campaign of Ida Wells, 1892-1900

Shute, Nevil On the Beach

Sinclair, Upton The Jungle

Sitkoff, Harvard The Struggle for Black Equality

Steinbeck, John Grapes of Wrath

Terkels, Studs Hard Times

Trumbo, Dalton Johnny Got his Gun

Utley Robert Cavalier in Buckskin: George Armstrong Custer and the Western

Warren, Robert Penn All the King’s Men

Woodward C. Vann The Strange Career of Jim Crow

Worster, Donald Dust Bowl

Wouk, Herman War and Remembrance

Wouk, Herman Winds of War

BOOK CRITIQUE RUBRIC

The book critique should be written in standard essay form, be about 3 pages in length, font size 12, Times New Roman, have a cover page and use proper grammar. I may decide to share your critiques with your classmates for their enlightenment. Contents must include:

  1. The Story20 pts

What is the story, in brief? Do not spend too much time on this topic

2. Background of book20 pts

  • What is the historical and geographical setting
  • What historical timer period does this book deal with

3. Background of the author20 pts.

  • Who is the person writing the book?
  • Why did the author choose to write the book
  • Is there a definite viewpoint or bias expressed?
  • If the book is a fictional account, does it cover an historical event, a true story, an eyewitness or autobiographical account, a work of fiction based on general/historical information.
  • If the book is non fiction, how does the author present the event or time period

4. Application20 pts.

  • What do you think can be learned in terms of U.S. History and the culture of this nation?
  • Was it written in the time period of which it deals with?

5. Evaluation20 pts.

  • What parts of the book or quotation from the book will be indelibly etched on your mind?
  • What human connections did the book help to make for you with other places and peoples, and other times?
  • What makes this story part of history in the U.S.? What makes it a classic?

Each of the above questions should be discussed in at least a paragraph. Try not to be vague. Use specific parts of the book to explain your points and give a complete, specific and detailed picture of the historical context. In other words, don’t just say “Western US during the 1800s. Give definite dates, places, people, and events.

Due date: Fifth week of each six weeks. No late assignments accepted