Senior Electives Summer Reading List
For more information about these books, visit http://kapalama.ksbe.edu/faculty/weburbri/Senior.html
Seniors will be held accountable for reading at least one of the three choices.
No exceptions.
Students are to choose one book from the list to read. All students will be
tested on their choice at the start of the school year in their English classes.
Books may be borrowed from the state library system or purchased from the
local bookstores. New and used paperback books may be purchased online. Two
such sites are http://www.campusi.com
and Amazon.com
If you find that your course does not “recommend” a book,
or you do not know what courses your are enrolled in for the fall, please
read any of the three choices.
A. Reservation Blues, Sherman Alexie[Amazon]
*Mature subject matter. Strong language and sexual situations. Some
violence and graphic situations.
Recommended for those Seniors enrolled in: American Satire, Fiction Writing
Workshop, Land and Literature, Literature of Competition, Literary Fantasy,
Literature of the Pacific, Mythology in Literature, World Poetry Seminar and
Works of Shakespeare.
Synopsis: In the 111-year life of the Spokane Indian reservation,
not one person has arrived by accident-until the day the black stranger appears
with nothing more than the suit he wears and the guitar slung over his back.
The man happens to be the legendary bluesman Robert Johnson, in flight from
the devil and presumed long dead. And when he passes his enchanted instrument
to young Thomas-Builds-the-Fire-storyteller, misfit, and musician-a magical
odyssey begins. From reservation bars to small-town taverns, from the cement
trails of Seattle to the concrete canyons of Manhattan, Thomas and his Coyote
Springs bandmates careen through ancestral nightmares and rock-and-roll dreams,
sounding chords of celebration and survival as timeless as their tribe. Sherman
Alexie imaginatively mixes narrative, newspaper excerpts, songs, journal entries,
visions, radio interviews, and dreams to explore the effects of Christianity
on Native Americans in the late twentieth century. In addition, he examines
the impact of cultural assimilation on the relationships between Indian women
and Indian men. Reservation Blues is a painful, humorous, and ultimately redemptive
symphony about God and indifference, faith and alcoholism, family and hunger,
life and death.
B. The Screwtape Letters, C.S. Lewis[Amazon]
Recommended for those Seniors enrolled in: American Satire, Bible as Literature
I and II, Psychological Story, Literary Fantasy and Works of Shakespeare.
Synopsis: A masterpiece of satire, this classic has entertained
and enlightened readers the world over with its sly and ironic portrayal of
human life from the vantage point of Screwtape, a highly placed assistant
to "Our Father Below." At once wildly comic, deadly serious, and
strikingly original, C. S. Lewis gives us the correspondence of the worldly-wise
old devil to his nephew Wormwood, a novice demon in charge of securing the
damnation of an ordinary young man. The Screwtape Letters is the most engaging
and humorous account of temptation - and triumph over it - ever written.?In
this humorous and perceptive exchange between two devils, C. S. Lewis delves
into moral questions about good vs. evil, temptation, repentance, and grace.
Through this wonderful tale, the reader emerges with a better understanding
of what it means to live a faithful life.
C. Minos, Marcos M. Villatoro[Amazon]
*Mature subject matter. Strong language and sexual situations. Graphic
violence and images of cruelty.
Recommended for those Seniors enrolled in: American Sa tire, Fiction Writing
Workshop, Literary Fantasy, Literature of Competition, Mythology in Literature,
World Poetry Seminar and Works of Shakespeare.
Synopsis: At the start of Villatoro's scintillating, densely
plotted sequel to 2001's Home Killings, bilingual Nashville cop Romilia Chacón
has been searching for six years for "the Whisperer," the serial
killer who murdered her older sister, Catalina. Romilia's hunt for the elusive
Whisperer, now calling himself Minos (after the mythical monster in Dante's
Inferno) is interrupted when she finds herself in the hospital with a horrible
gash on her neck, a near-fatal wound from another killer she was pursuing.
Her struggle to come to terms with the large, unsightly scar she will always
bear quietly wins her the reader's sympathy. During her convalescence, she
discovers the Internet and an entirely new way to investigate the Whisperer.
An unexpected source, however, provides the most help: drug lord Rafael Murillo,
a creepy yet alluring figure also known by the Mayan name Tekún Umán.
Romilia inadvertently saved his life when she was wounded, and in return Tekún
steals FBI files on the Whisperer and sends them to her. There's something
appealing, in spite of his nature, in Tekún's devotion to Romilia.
In addition, the contrast of a palpably present, ambiguous antagonist, Tekún,
and the evil Whisperer creates a compelling, dramatic balance. The ending
resolves beautifully, but that is really secondary considering how well the
story works as a whole.
D. Behold the Many, Lois-Ann Yamanaka [Amazon]
*Mature subject matter.
Recommended for those Seniors enrolled in: American Satire, Fiction Writing
Workshop, Land and Literature, Literature of Competition, Literature of the
Pacific, Mythology in Literature, World Poetry Seminar and Works of Shakespeare.
Summary: Lois-Ann Yamanaka has been hailed as "the
freshest, most dynamic literary voice to come from Hawaii in recent years"
(Somini Sengupta, The New York Times), and as "one of the most original
voices on the American literary scene" (Jamie James, The Atlantic Monthly).
In her novel, Behold the Many, Yamanaka tells the eerily beautiful story of
three sisters and the captivating world they create out of their suffering.
In 1913, stricken by tuberculosis, young Anah, Aki, and Leah are sent away
from their family for treatment at St. Joseph's, an orphanage in Hawaii's
Kalihi Valley. Of the three, two will die there, in spite of the nuns' best
efforts to save them, and only Anah, the eldest, will grow to adulthood. But
the ghosts of the dead sisters are afraid to leave the grounds of St. Joseph's,
where they wait until they can return home. As Anah prepares to begin married
life away from the orphanage, they haunt her. Desperate for the love of their
sister, who has communicated with them since childhood, jealous of her ability
to live in the physical world, and terrified of losing her, they are determined
to thwart Anah's happiness. One of them places a curse on her that will reverberate
through the course of her future and that of her new family. While Anah struggles
to appease the dead and to quiet her own guilt for having survived, it becomes
apparent that only through one of her daughters can redemption be attained.