CLEP Humanities › Fiction
What is the early-nineteenth-century English novel about a young woman who plays matchmaker to the detriment of her own relationships?
Emma
Pride and Prejudice
Great Expectations
The Heart of Midlothian
Persuasion
Jane Austen's Emma, published in 1815, deals with a genteel young woman dealing with romantic intrigues in Regency-era England. What sets Emma apart is its focus on its main character's foibles in attempting to play matchmaker with everyone she knows. Using her typical wit and satire, Austen portrays Emma's headstrong attitude getting in the way of her own life.
Which novel features a young man named Pip working his way through Victorian society?
Great Expectations
Pride and Prejudice
A Tale of Two Cities
Wuthering Heights
Middlemarch
Charles Dickens' next-to-last novel, 1861's Great Expectations is often considered Dickens' most well-constructed and best-written novel. The story follows, in first person narrative, a young boy named Pip as he grows up and navigates Victorian London society through various connections he makes. The book is able to provide Dickens a platform to criticize Victorian manners and mores, as well as class structures.
The American author who wrote a series of novels and short stories set in the fictional Yoknapatawtha County, Mississippi was __________.
William Faulkner
John Updike
Edith Wharton
Philip Roth
Sinclair Lewis
Virtually the entire canon of William Faulkner is set in the fictional Yoknapatawtha County. Even the stories set elsewhere refer back to or feature characters from Faulkner's other stories set there. William Faulkner’s literary achievements earned him the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1949.
What is the late-nineteenth-century novel of the Civil War by Stephen Crane?
Red Badge of Courage
Ethan Frome
Heart of Darkness
Andersonville
War and Peace
The 1895 novel, The Red Badge of Courage, was Stephen Crane's second novel, but his first success, making him a literary celebrity at the age of 24. Crane was inspired to write a tale of the Civil War thirty years after the end of the conflict, after reading tales of battles from veterans. Crane thought the journalistic reports did not convey what it was like psychologically to be in war, and so he crafted his story about a soldier by interviewing a host of Civil War veterans about their experiences.
What is the Russian novel concerning a family's struggles between a father and three brothers?
The Brothers Karamazov
Anna Karenina
Notes From Underground
Taras Bulba
Crime and Punishment
The Brothers Karamazov took Fyodor Dostoevsky over two years to write, and he intended the massive work as the first in a series, but he died four months after its publication. The novel concerns the Karamazov family, led by patriarch Fyodor Karamazov and his three sons of young adult age, the hotheaded Dmitri, the rational Ivan, and the faithful Alexei. Philosophical and emotional conflicts drive the plot and themes of the lengthy novel.
The author H.P. Lovecraft is known for writing in what genre?
Horror
Romance
Pastoral
Noir
Mystery
H.P. Lovecraft was a writer who toiled away in his own life in relative obscurity, writing horror and science fiction pieces for small magazines. After his death in 1937, however, Lovecraft's stories, which featured otherworldly scenarios, horrible creatures, and threats to humanity, gained a larger popularity. In modern times, Lovecraft is seen as one of the foremost science fiction and horror authors.
Which author wrote the twentieth century morality tale about the sport of baseball The Natural?
Bernard Malamud
Philip Roth
Saul Bellow
J. D. Salinger
John Updike
Bernard Malamud's 1952novel The Natural appears on its surface to be a straightforward novel about a talented baseball player who attempts a comeback after he was shot on the verge of his major league breakthrough at the age of nineteen. The novel, though, deals with themes of morality, mythology, and celebrity. The novel is one of the author's most famous, and was made into a successful film.
Which novel features a young man named Pip working his way through Victorian society?
Great Expectations
Pride and Prejudice
A Tale of Two Cities
Wuthering Heights
Middlemarch
Charles Dickens' next-to-last novel, 1861's Great Expectations is often considered Dickens' most well-constructed and best-written novel. The story follows, in first person narrative, a young boy named Pip as he grows up and navigates Victorian London society through various connections he makes. The book is able to provide Dickens a platform to criticize Victorian manners and mores, as well as class structures.
What is the Russian novel concerning a family's struggles between a father and three brothers?
The Brothers Karamazov
Anna Karenina
Notes From Underground
Taras Bulba
Crime and Punishment
The Brothers Karamazov took Fyodor Dostoevsky over two years to write, and he intended the massive work as the first in a series, but he died four months after its publication. The novel concerns the Karamazov family, led by patriarch Fyodor Karamazov and his three sons of young adult age, the hotheaded Dmitri, the rational Ivan, and the faithful Alexei. Philosophical and emotional conflicts drive the plot and themes of the lengthy novel.
Which of the following books was not written by Ernest Hemingway?
All Quiet on the Western Front
The Old Man and the Sea
The Sun Also Rises
A Farewell to Arms
For Whom the Bell Tolls
All Quiet on the Western Front, written by the German writer Erich Maria Remarque, shares many similarities with some of Ernest Hemingway's novels, as it is set during World War I and based on the author's experiences. However, Hemingway's distinctive style, modernist narrative structure, terse language, and glorification of machismo are almost polar opposites to Remarque's style.