Newest Study Guides
Each study guide includes essays, an in-depth chapter-by-chapter summary and analysis, character list, theme list, historical context, author biography and quiz. Study guides are available in PDF format.
Each study guide includes essays, an in-depth chapter-by-chapter summary and analysis, character list, theme list, historical context, author biography and quiz. Study guides are available in PDF format.
Carl Sandburg was a renowned and celebrated American poet. He was born in 1878 to Swedish parents in Illinois. At the age of 13, he left formal schooling to help support his family, working as a milkman, a porter and a bricklayer. He later moved...
Published in 1918, Eminent Victorians is a collection of four biographies of prominent heroes at the time of the author, Lytton Strachey. The biographies include those of Cardinal Manning, Florence Nightingale, Thomas Arnold, and General Gordon,...
Published in 2000, The Danish Girl is an American novel by author David Ebershoff. A novel of realistic fiction, the main character becomes one of the first people to go through sexual reassignment surgery, a surgical transformation for someone to...
Published in 1936, Keep the Aspidistra Flying is one of the earlier novels of the famous writer and activist, George Orwell. Gordon Comstock is the main character in the novel, and his main goal is to defy the main things that society is doing -...
The School for Wives is a comedic play first performed for the brother of a King in 1662. The play was written by the French playwright Jean-Baptiste Moliere and was considered one of the best plays at the time and one of the best by Moliere,...
The Barber of Seville was written in 1773 by Pierre Beaumarchais, and first performed in 1775 at the Comedie-Francaise in the Tuileries. The play belongs to a trilogy by the playwright which also includes The Marriage of Figaro and The Guilty...
Released in 1961, The Physicists is a play by Swiss writer Friedrich Duerrenmatt. The play was first released in Australia by the Australian Broadcasting Commission, and has since been adapted int many other forms such as an Australian radio...
Emily Pauline Johnson was a Canadian writer of the nineteenth century. Born during 1861, Johnson was raised on Six Nations Reserve, which was a Native American reservation. She died during 1913 due to complications from breast cancer. Her...
Duncan Campell Scott was a Canadian writer and poet that lived from 1862 to 1947. Publishing many famous poems and other works, he has become one of the most recognizable Canadian writers, and he even has an award named after him. Many critics of...
Released on December 3, 2010 in the United States, Black Swan is a psychological horror film directed by Darren Aronofsky. The film, raking in over $325 million at the box office, was produced by Cross Creek Pictures and distributed by Fox...
Bamboozled is Spike Lee’s comedy released in 2000 which was at the time—and remains—his most acrid, ironic, and profoundly satirical cinematic statement on the state of racism in America at the turn of the millennium. The film stars Damon Wayans...
Black Panther: A Nation Under Our Feet Book 1 is a comic book published by Ta-Nehisi Coates. Published in 2016, the book features the main character Black Panther, who rules the fictional African nation of Wakanda. The name of the book, Black...
Letters to Alice on First Reading Jane Austen, or Letters to Alice for short, is a book written by Fay Weldon and published in 1984. The novel is comprised of letters the are from a fictional character called "Aunt Fay", and are to Alice. Alice is...
Graceland is a cultural novel written by Chris Abani and published on January 26, 2005. Chris Abani is a Nigerian American writer. Most of his work is known for addressing political and cultural issues in his home country, Nigeria. He got...
James George Frazier was intrigued by an ancient Italian tale of "King Of The Wood" and this book is his attempt to discover the origin of the story. The eponymous King was in actuality a priest whose task was to protect Nemi, a grove of trees...
Tanith Lee (born in 1947) was a British writer and poet, most known for her science fiction, horror and fantasy works. She was taught to read by her father and started writing at the age of 9, publishing her first novel in 1971. Lee’s extensive...
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper was an African-American poet, fiction writer, journalist, and abolitionist of the nineteenth century. She was born during 1825 to free African-American parents in Baltimore, Maryland and died during 1911 in...
It's Raining in Mango was written by Australian author Thea Astley. The book is a sort of a fictional autobiography, with aspects of Thea's own life thrown into the book but in a fictional context. The book explores many parts of Australian...
This Is How You Lose Her is a collection of short stories written and compiled by Junot Diaz and published in 2012. The main character of the short stories bears the name Yunior, this character showing up in many other stories and novels by Diaz....
Does the world really need another super hero? The answer, of course, is yes, especially when it's Coates' Black Panther. Coates is a critically acclaimed author and the creator of "Between The World And Me" so when Marvel Comics announced that he...
Although raised among the grand forests of the Pacific Northwest in Puyallup, Washington, it might be easy to assume that Allen Braden belongs to the grand tradition of southern writers. Braden’s reputation as a poet has been growing steadily in...
Tim Butcher, a journalist with the "Daily Telegraph", one of Britain's most-read newspapers, wanted to draw the world's attention to the bloodiest war in the world. It was 2002, and in the Congo, deep in the heart of Africa, one thousand people...
Nada is a classic Spanish literature novel written by Carmen Laforet. Laforet is a Spanish author known for her literary works depicting life during and after the Spanish Civil War. The novel was published in 1945.The narrative is set in the...
Chilean novelist Isabel Allende’s Eva Luna was published in its original Spanish in 1985 with the first translation into English appearing three years later. A quote from the tales of the Arabian Nights prefacing the story indicates that the title...