HARTSBROOK HIGH SCHOOL

SUMMER 2018 READING ASSIGNMENT

Grades 11 and 12

Dear Rising Juniors and Seniors:

Summer break can be a wonderful time to catch up on your reading—to discover new genres or authors, to re-read old favorites, or to finally tackle a literary classic. We encourage you to explore the titles on the attached lists. If you liked a book in one of your courses last year, you might want to try another by the same author this summer. When you return to school in the fall, your advisor will be interested to hear what you have read and your responses.

On the next page, you will find for instructions for your summer 2018 reading assignment. Please read the directions carefully.

If you have any questions, you can contact me by e-mail over the summer.

Enjoy your summer reading!

Sincerely,

Liz Bedell

HARTSBROOK HIGH SCHOOL

SUMMER 2018 READING ASSIGNMENT

Grades 11 and 12

Your summer reading assignment has two parts:

Part 1: All High School Read:

First, join the rest of the high school and the high school faculty (and any parents who wish to participate) in our All High School Read. What’s that? A book we all read together, in common, to form a basis for conversations and exploration throughout the school year.

This summer, we are asking all high school students (including incoming 9th graders) to read Between The World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates as part of their summer reading. This is an autobiographical and reflective account, written as a letter to his teenage son, which describes Coates’ experience of growing up as an African-American young man in Baltimore. We encourage high school families to read this book together, via audiobook or passing the volume around, and to talk about it before we gather again in September.

We will be discussing this book as a high school community in our first weeks back.

We have asked Amherst Books to order copies of Between The World And Me for us, and you will find them there. The book is widely stocked and will be in your local library as well.

Part 2: General Reading

Second, we want you to read a minimum of TWO books this summer. Reading more is better and heartily encouraged, but at least two books (for a total of 3, counting the All High School Read).

We ask that you read one NONFICTION book (from the attached NONFICTION list) and one FICTION book (from the attached FICTION list). If there is another book you’d like to substitute in lieu of something from one of these lists, please email Ms. Bedell (especially if you want personalized suggestions).

HAVE FUN READING!

FICTION

Adichie, Chimamanda –Half a Yellow Sun; Americanah

Adiga, Aravind –White Tiger

Allende, Isabel –House of Spirits

Atwood, Margaret –Cat’s Eye; A Handmaid’s Tale

Austen, Jane –Mansfield Park; Sense and Sensibility

Baldwin, James –Go Tell it on the Mountain; Giovanni’s Room

Camus, Albert –The Stranger

Castillo, Ana –So Far From God

Doerr, Anthony – All The Light We Cannot See

Eliot, George –The Mill on the Floss

Ellison, Ralph –Invisible Man

Eugenides, Jeffrey –Middlesex

Fadiman, Ann –The Spirit Catches Youand You Fall Down

Faulkner, William –Light in August

Fitzgerald, F. Scott –Tender is the Night; This Side of Paradise

Harbach, Colin – The Art of Fielding

Hawthorne, Nathaniel –The House of Seven Gables

Hamid, Mohsin –The Reluctant Fundamentalist; Exit West

Hemingway, Ernest –The Sun Also Rises

Highsmith, Patricia –The Talented Mr. Ripley

Ishiguro, Kazuo –Remains of the Day; Never Let Me Go

Jhabvala, Ruth Prawer –The Nature of Passion

Kafka, Franz –The Trial

Kalman, Maira –The Principles of Uncertainty

Kincaid, Jamaica –A Small Place

Kingsolver, Barbara –The Poisonwood Bible

Lahiri, Jhumpa –Unaccustomed Earth; The Lowland

Marquez, Gabriel Garcia –One Hundred Years of Solitude; Love in the Time of Cholera

McCann, Colum –Let the Great World Spin

McCarthy, Cormac –All the Pretty Horses

McEwan, Ian –Atonement; Saturday

Munro, Alice –Lives of Girls and Women

Naipaul, V.S. –A House for Mr. Biswas

Obrecht, Tea – The Tiger’s Wife

O’Brien, Tim – The Things They Carried

O’Connor, Flannery –Everything That Rises Must Converge

Ondaatje, Michael –The English Patient

Oyeyemi, Helen –Boy, Snow, Bird

Patchett, Ann –Bel Canto

Robinson, Marilyn – Housekeeping

Roy, Arundhati –The God of Small Things

Saramago, Jose –Blindness

Silko, Leslie Marmon –Ceremony

Smiley, Jane –A Thousand Acres; Ordinary Love and Good Will

Smith, Zadie –White Teeth

Steinbeck, John –The Grapes of Wrath; East of Eden

Walker, Alice –The Color Purple

Ward, JesmynSing, Unburied Sing; Salvage the Bones

Welty, Eudora –Delta Wedding

Wharton, Edith –House of Mirth; The Age of Innocence

Woolf, Tobias. Old School

NONFICTION

Greenburg, Paul – Four Fish: the Future of the Last Wild Food

Calvino, Italo –If on a Winter’s Night A Traveler; Invisible Cities

Anzaldua, Gloria, Cherrie Moraga This Bridge Called My Back

Angell, Roger The Summer Game

Beah, IshmaelA Long Way Home

Bernstein, Carl and Bob Woodward All the President’s Men

Calvino, Italo If on a Winter’s Night A Traveler

Invisible Cities

Carson, Rachel Silent Spring

Chiang, JungWild Swans

Conway, Jill KerThe Road From Coorain

Dillard, AnnieAn American Childhood

Fadiman, AnneThe Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down

Grealy, LucyAutobiography of a Face

Greenburg, Paul Four Fish: the Future of the Last Wild Food

Leopold, AldoA Sand County Almanac

Malcolm XThe Autobiography ofMalcolm X

Mann, Charles1491

McBride, James The Color of Water

Neihardt, JohnBlack Elk Speaks

Pirsig, RobertZen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance

Redniss, LaurenMarie and Pierre Curie--A Tale of Love and Fallout

Simpson, EileenReversals

Smith, AlisonName All the Animals

Ward, Peter D. & Donald BrownleeRare Earth

Wilkerson, Isabel The Warmth of Other Suns

Wolff, TobiasThis Boy’s Life