Last year, I re-read To Kill a Mockingbird for the first time since High School. It absolutely blew me away, as the prose just flowed like quicksilver. I couldn't find a single sentence to critique. It's interesting, too, that I started reading it after finishing The Hunger Games trilogy, which was fun but had some really clunky writing.
In the last few days, I've been reading Fahrenheit 451 for the first time ever. It's something I always wanted to read, but never got around to it for whatever reason. And it's amazing, saying everything about the importance of books and literature that I could never quite say. I told a friend of mine that I was reading it and she said it was required reading in High School for her. I'd never heard of that before, at least for this book.
So my question to you: what were some of you required High School reading? Was there anything that you enjoyed or absolutely loathed? Heck, if you want to mention Shakespeare plays you studied, do share.
From what remember, some of the other works that I studied included:
Who Has Seen the Wind, All Quiet on the Western Front, Romeo & Juliet, MacBeth (or as one former English professor of mine said, "That Scottish Play." He was a former stage actor and very superstitious about this to the point of covering his ears if anyone dared say the title of the play), Julius Caesar, Oedipus Rex. I remember reading The Outsiders in Junior High, which is another book I'd like to revisit some day.
In the last few days, I've been reading Fahrenheit 451 for the first time ever. It's something I always wanted to read, but never got around to it for whatever reason. And it's amazing, saying everything about the importance of books and literature that I could never quite say. I told a friend of mine that I was reading it and she said it was required reading in High School for her. I'd never heard of that before, at least for this book.
So my question to you: what were some of you required High School reading? Was there anything that you enjoyed or absolutely loathed? Heck, if you want to mention Shakespeare plays you studied, do share.
From what remember, some of the other works that I studied included:
Who Has Seen the Wind, All Quiet on the Western Front, Romeo & Juliet, MacBeth (or as one former English professor of mine said, "That Scottish Play." He was a former stage actor and very superstitious about this to the point of covering his ears if anyone dared say the title of the play), Julius Caesar, Oedipus Rex. I remember reading The Outsiders in Junior High, which is another book I'd like to revisit some day.