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Paperback Backpack Literature an Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, Drama, and Writing Book

ISBN: 1256342750

ISBN13: 9781256342755

Backpack Literature an Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, Drama, and Writing

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Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

$5.79
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Book Overview

This print textbook is available for students to rent for their classes. The Pearson print rental program provides students with affordable access to learning materials, so they come to class ready to... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Needed this for a Wrt-201-062 English Comp-2

Quick shipping and good seller. Im not a fan of this type of reading, but has many short stories and poems in it. If you likke this sort of reading this is a good book to sample many types of writers. Cheers!

English at it's best

This book is a wonderful book for an English class. It's filled with great stories and poems that aid the typical ENC1102 (English II) course. Allot of the course will depend on your writing on it's own, and this book helps a great deal. It isn't boring at all.

english 1302 book.. good stories

i had to have this book for school.. good stories and the other info is helpful to understanding the stories. i just dont like english. =)

Not Bad At All

I'm a student and this textbook was assigned for my intro to literature class. I was surprised by how much I actually ENJOYED this textbook! There is a lot of good writing in it, some great examples of literature, which made for interesting class discussions. I even found myself reading a lot of the passages that weren't assigned, just out of curiousity, and most of them were really quite enjoyable.

A compelling choice

Overpriced like most textbooks but probably the only introductory literature anthology since Benjamin LaMott's "Close Imagining" (McGraw Hill) that I'd use a second time. It's compact yet very generous and representative. For example, you can pair "Young Goodman Brown" with "A Good Man Is Hard to Find" or "A Rose for Emily" with "Barn Burning" or "A & P" with "Araby." Most of the frequently taught poems are here, and there are more plays--from Sophocles to Arthur Miller--than would ever fit into a single-semester course. And the Appendices are priceless--more useful information than is found in popular writing Handbooks along with exemplary student essays (a particularly handy feature). I've previously used the big Kennedy and Gioia Intro text. Not only did the binding begin to fall apart on me mid-way though the semester but the amount of material--most of it never assigned--simply added to the guilt any instructor who emphasizes close reading of individual texts is bound to feel. Also, any introductory literature course that even purports to be representative must include some examples of the most important modern genre of all--the novel. Add "Great Expectations" and "The Great Gatsby" to the course and you'll see why the shorter, more compact anthology is the only one to consider. In fact, I might even settle for a "back pocket" version. (My experiences with the complementary (but not really "complimentary") internet site--which my students never seemed to be able to access--would suggest that it would best be ignored. Go for the DVD or a price break instead.)
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