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ENGLISH III (H) SUMMER
READING
As you read, keep a response journal
in which you thoughtfully respond to quotes and/or interesting passages: Write down several quotes/passages from each chapter;
Then write what each means to you; What, do you think, might each mean to the author?
Your response journal
is due on the first day of class. Also, be prepared for a test and a group project on each text you've read. Need help with your reading ?- background information or guides to understanding? Try the EBSCO
data bank LITERARY REFERENCE CENTER. This is provided free of charge for you by the Laf. Parish School System.
Link - http://search.ebscohost.com/
User ID = lpssstudent Password = gumbo
Choose TWO of the following titles: *From the ALA Best Books for Young Adults: ala.org/yalsa
Upstate, by Kalisha Buckhanon "Baby, the
first thing I need to know from you is do you believe I killed my father?"
So begins Upstate, a powerful
story told through letters between seventeen-year-old Antonio and his sixteen-year-old girlfriend, Natasha, set in the 1990's
in New York. Antonio and Natasha's world is turned upside down, and their young love is put to the test, when Antonio finds
himself in jail, accused of a shocking crime. Antonio fights to stay alive on the inside, while on the outside, Natasha faces
choices that will change her life. Over the course of a decade, they share a desperate correspondence. Often, they have only
each other to turn to as life takes them down separate paths and leaves them wondering if they will ever find their way back
together.
Startling, real, and filled with raw emotion, Upstate is an unforgettable coming-of-age story
with a message of undeniable hope. Brilliant and profoundly felt, it is destined to speak to a new generation of readers.
Inexcusable, by Chris Lynch Keir
Sarafian may not know much, but he knows himself. And the one thing he knows about himself is that he is a good guy. A guy
who's a devoted son and brother, a loyal friend, and a reliable teammate. And maybe most important of all, a guy who understands
that when a girl says no, she means it. But that is not what Gigi Boudakian, childhood friend and Keir's lifelong love, says
he is. What Gigi says he is seems impossible to Keir....It is something inexcusable -- the worst thing he can imagine, the
very opposite of everything he wants to be. As Keir recalls the events leading up
to his fateful night with Gigi, he realizes that the way things look are definitely not the way they really are -- and that
it may be all too easy for a good guy to do something terribly wrong. Chris Lynch
has written a no-holds-barred story about truth, lies, and responsibility -- a story that every good guy needs to hear.
Peeps, by Scott Westerfeld A year ago, Cal Thompson was a college freshman more interested in meeting girls and
partying than in attending biology class. Now, after a fateful encounter with a mysterious woman named Morgan, biology has
become, literally, Cal's life. Cal was infected by a parasite that has a truly horrifying
effect on its host. Cal himself is a carrier, unchanged by the parasite, but he's infected the girlfriends he's had since
Morgan. All three have turned into the ravening ghouls Cal calls Peeps. The rest of us know them as vampires. It's Cal's job
to hunt them down before they can create more of their kind. . . . Bursting with
the sharp intelligence and sly humor that are fast becoming his trademark, Scott Westerfeld's novel is an utterly original
take on an archetype of horror. I Am The Messenger,
by Markus Zusak Meet Ed Kennedy—underage cabdriver, pathetic cardplayer, and useless at romance.
He lives in a shack with his coffee-addicted dog, the Doorman, and he’s hopelessly in love with his best friend, Audrey.
His life is one of peaceful routine and incompetence, until he inadvertently stops a bank robbery. That’s when the first
Ace arrives. That’s when Ed becomes the messenger. . . .
Chosen to care, he makes his way through town helping
and hurting (when necessary), until only one question remains: Who’s behind Ed’s mission?
Realm of Possibility, by David Levithan Here’s what I know about the realm of possibility— it is always expanding, it is never what you think
it is. Everything around us was once deemed impossible. From the airplane overhead to the phones in our
pockets to the choir girl putting her arm around the metalhead. As hard as it is for us to see sometimes, we all
exist within the realm of possibility. Most of the limits are of our own world’s devising. And yet, every day we each do so many things that were once impossible to us.
Enter The Realm of Possibility
and meet a boy whose girlfriend is in love with Holden Caulfield; a girl who loves the boy who wears all black; a boy with
the perfect body; and a girl who writes love songs for a girl she can’t have.
These are just a few of the
captivating characters readers will get to know in this intensely heartfelt new novel about those ever-changing moments of
love and heartbreak that go hand-in-hand with high school. David Levithan plumbs the depths of teenage emotion to create an
amazing array of voices that readers won’t forget. So, enter their lives and prepare to welcome the realm of possibility
open to us all. Love, joy, and these stories will linger. Saving
Francesca, by Melina Marchetta MOST OF MY friends now go to Pius Senior
College, but my mother wouldn't allow it because she says the girls there leave with limited options and she didn't bring
me up to have limitations placed upon me. If you know my mother, you'll sense there's an irony there, based on the fact that
she is the Queen of the Limitation Placers in my life.
Francesca battles her mother, Mia, constantly
over what's best for her. All Francesca wants is her old friends and her old school, but instead Mia sends her to St. Sebastian's,
an all-boys' school that has just opened its doors to girls. Now Francesca's surrounded by hundreds of boys, with only a few
other girls for company. All of them weirdos--or worse.
Then one day, Mia is too depressed to get out of bed. One
day turns into months, and as her family begins to fall apart, Francesca realizes that without her mother's high spirits,
she hardly knows who she is. But she doesn't yet realize that she's more like Mia than she thinks. With a little unlikely
help from St. Sebastian's, she just might be able to save her family, her friends, and--especially--herself. So B. It, by Sarah Weeks You couldn't really tell about Mama's brain just from looking at her, but it was obvious as soon as she spoke. She had a
high voice, like a little girl's, and she only knew twenty-three words. I know this for a fact, because we kept a list of
the things Mama said tacked to the inside of the kitchen cabinet. Most of the words were common ones, like good and more and
hot, but there was one word only my mother said, soof. Although she lives an unconventional lifestyle with her mentally disabled mother and their doting
neighbor, Bernadette, Heidi has a lucky streak that has a way of pointing her in the right direction. When a mysterious word
in her mother's vocabulary begins to haunt her, Heidi's thirst for the truth leads her on a cross-country journey in search
of the secrets of her past. Paper Towns by John Green
From Publishers Weekly: "Weeks before graduating from their
Orlando-area high school, Quentin Jacobsen's childhood best friend, Margo, reappears in his life, specifically at his window,
commanding him to take her on an all-night, score-settling spree. Quentin has loved Margo from not so afar (she lives next
door), years after she ditched him for a cooler crowd. Just as suddenly, she disappears again, and the plot's considerable
tension derives from Quentin's mission to find out if she's run away or committed suicide. Margo's parents, inured to her
extreme behavior, wash their hands, but Quentin thinks she's left him a clue in a highlighted volume of Leaves of Grass.
Q's sidekick, Radar, editor of a Wikipedia-like Web site, provides the most intelligent thinking and fuels many hilarious
exchanges with Q. The title, which refers to unbuilt subdivisions and copyright trap towns that appear on maps but don't exist,
unintentionally underscores the novel's weakness: both milquetoast Q and self-absorbed Margo are types, not fully dimensional
characters. Readers who can get past that will enjoy the edgy journey and off-road thinking. Ages 12–up."
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