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can we do a group one to practice with one of the classics everybody reads like to kill a mockingbird or of mice and men?
yeah, of course - i don't know how to set any of this up - i was just putting it out there. we could totally do it together


okay, so i set up one for Of Mice and Men, and you guys can just have at it. i am not going to contribute to this one, i am just going to see what happens. all you need to do is come up with an element of the book that interests you, or that you think is important, and try to find other books that contain similar elements. use books you have already read, or feel free to use any of the RA tools listed on this site under "resources". have a blast!
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1K...
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1K...
okay! it should all work now - the link is in message 10, and it should take you right to the document where everyone should have the ability to add stuff. if you have problems or questions, please share them and i will save the day. or greg will. more likely greg will.
for now, let's just get a list going, and maybe later we can do all the fancy annotations. first i just want to see what kind of topics come out of this.
for now, let's just get a list going, and maybe later we can do all the fancy annotations. first i just want to see what kind of topics come out of this.

fyi I think that The Heart is a Lonely Hunter actually fits multiple elements from Of Mice and Men. It would fit under male friendship, as well as maybe depression era america or some topic related to disabilities, which I can't quite pinpoint yet. I'll have to give that particular topic more thought.
yeah, it's no problem if they duplicate - we are just playing around with the idea. i'm glad people are playing along!
one of the author's own poems?? i think so, but i'm not a maniac about this, so whatever - anything goes...

Really I only suggested it because I know I'm blanking on something obvious and it keeps coming to mind ;)



AND! I made a Flannery O'Connor readers' path - in goggle! my very own self! with jo's content (so far; and some of mine - mine uses capitals)
Join us HERE.
i just want to say, that i was super duper busy and did not get a chance to contribute to your reader's path yet, but that i am so excited that you made one, and am going to contribute once this damn paper is finished. i love love love that this experiment excited you. such a geek i am.
oh, actually i just bopped in there and added one, but tell me how you are making them hyperlinks! that is cool!
Books mentioned in this topic
Of Mice and Men (other topics)Twilight (other topics)
this is pretty simple. books mean different things to different people. someone could read a book like Twilight and say "this is a book about vampires" and be looking for more books about vampires. someone else could read the same book, and think, "what a realistic portrayal of first love. i want more books like this." and a third person could think, "the best thing in this book are its references to the works of great literature." and be looking for a book-suggestion that plays on those themes. so a fun thing to do, to strengthen your RA skills, and even if you just want to think about books in a different way, is to take a book, isolate three or four different elements of it, and try to match those elements to other books. here is a link to one i did for school last semester - i can't get it in here for some reason. (twss) but it is way fancier than anything we would be doing here in the group: pictures and whatnot. but it will give you an idea of the kinds of things that reader's paths do.
(there was also a formatting failure when i was transferring it to google documents, so some of the tables spill over. oops.)
so if anyone else wants to try a more basic version of a reader's path, without all the bells and whistles, here is a thread for it.
i think it could be fun.
but i am a nerd.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1v...