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| Full Edition | |
| Preliminary: The Process of Reading, Responding to, and Writing About Literature | |
| Writing About Likes and Dislikes: Responding to Literature | |
| Writing About a Close-Reading: Analyzing Entire Short Poems or Selected Passages from Prose Fiction and Longer Poems | |
| Writing About Character: The People in Literature | |
| Writing About Point of View: The Position or Stance of the Work's Narrator or Speaker... MORE | |
| Writing About Plot and Structure: The Development and Organization of Narratives and Drama | |
| Writing About Setting: The Background of Place, Objects, and Culture in Literature | |
| Writing About an Idea or a Theme: The Meanings and the Messages in Literature | |
| Writing About Metaphors and Similes: A Source of Depth and Range in Literature | |
| Writing About Symbolism and Allusions: Windows to a Wide Expanse of Meaning | |
| Writing About Tone: The Writer's Control over Attitudes and Feeling | |
| Writing About a Problem: Challenges to Overcome Reading | |
| Writing About Poetic Form: The Shape of the Poem | |
| Writing Essays of Comparison-Contrast and Extended Comparison-Contrast: Learning by Seeing Literary Works Together | |
| Writing a Review Essay: Developing Ideas for General or Particular Audiences | |
| Writing about Film: Drama on the Silver Screen, Television Set, and Computer Monitor | |
| Writing Examinations on Literature | |
| Writing and Documenting the Research Essay: Using Extra Resources for Understanding | |
| Critical Approaches Important in the Study of Literature | |
| The Use of References and Tenses in Writing About Literature | |
| A Brief Anthology of Works Used for Demonstrative | |
| Essays and References | |
| Stories: An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge, Ambrose Bierce | |
| The Story of an Hour | |
| The Three Strangers | |
| Young Goodman Brown | |
| The Necklace, (in Chapter 1) | |
| First Confession | |
| The Masque of the Red Death | |
| Poems: Dover Beach | |
| The Tyger | |
| Desert Places | |
| Channel Firing | |
| The Man He Killed | |
| Easter Wings | |
| Virtue | |
| Bright Star | |
| On First Looking Into | |
| Rhine Boat Trip, Irving Layton | |
| Patterns | |
| Anthem for Doomed Youth | |
| Ballad of Birmingham | |
| Sonnet 30, (in Chapter 9) | |
| Sonnet 73, William Shakespeare | |
| Sonnet 116, William Shakespeare | |
| The Eagle, (in Chapter 13), Alfred, Lord Tennyson | |
| The Second Coming, William Butler Yeats | |
| The Boxes | |
| Reconciliation | |
| Lines Written in Early Spring | |
| Plays: The Bear: A Joke in One Act | |
| Trifles | |
| A Glossary of Important Literary Terms | |
| Index of Authors, Directors, First Lines of Poetry, Titles, and Topics | |
| Brief Edition | |
| Preliminary: The Process of Reading, Responding to, and Writing About Literature | |
| Writing About a Close-Reading: Analyzing Entire Short Poems or Selected Passages from Prose Fiction and Longer Poems | |
| Writing About Character: The People in Literature | |
| Writing About Point of View: The Position or Stance of the Work's Narrat | |
| Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved. |