Loud Lit- many books and stories read out loud ( has "Tell-Tale Heart)
All Summer in a Day; by Ray Bradbury
"Man in the Black Suit"
"Masque of the Red Death" "Masque of the Red Death"
"Broken Chain", by Gary Soto
"The Talk" Gary Soto "The Talk" by Gary Soto ( also in PDF)
"The Landlady", by Roald Dahl
“There Will Come Soft Rain” by Ray Bradbury
“Young Goodman Brown“ ( audio- here!)\
The Crucible ( Pdf)
The Crucible ( separated by Acts, each a PDF to open)
The Raven, by Edgar Allan Poe ( read by Christopher Walken)
The Outsiders: here’s a link to the complete book
link to audio of The Outsiders
Diary of Anne Frank ( her diary, not the play)
Diary of Anne Frank (Not the play)- PDF
Great PDf/ textbook you can copy from of the play versions of "Diary of Anne Frank"
Diary of Anne Frank Play version PDF here!
The Diary of Anne Frank- the play
Anne Frank play, Act I only
Anne Play- from a textbook
Diary of Anne Frank- the play Audio here!
Anne Quizzes
Sarah's Key
SPEAK- Laurie Halse Anderson
Speak on a google doc...
"When I Lay My Burden Down" by Maya Angelou
Of Mice and Men- by John Steinbeck- or here too is another Mice and Men
Mice and Men v2. - part 1; part 2; part 3; part 4; part 5; part 6
Mice and Men audio- be sure to thank the man!
Fahrenheit 451- Ray Bradbury
The Catcher in the Rye: www.iktmmedia.com/files/J.D._Salinger_-_Catcher_In_The_Rye.pdf (copy and paste this link)
Shakespeare’s Complete Works
Another link to all Shakespeare’s work ( MIT)
Some Shakespeare read out loud
The Lord of the Flies- complete text online
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
The Great Gatsby
O, Brave New World, by Aldous Huxley
The link below will link you to a site that has a complete version of Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird. At the bottom you’ll have to click ‘show full text.’ To Kill a Mockingbird
Siddhartha
James Joyce: Portrait of the Artist
The Sun Also Rises
To The Lighthouse- by Virginia Woolf
The Online book page
The Divine Comedy
OTHER
Literary periods and characteristics
The Internet Archive & the Wayback machine. See what webpages looked like way back when, well, not too far back.
PAL- Perspectives in American Literature
http://www.textetc.com/traditional.html
No comments:
Post a Comment