Editorial Rob Franek, Senior VP, Publisher Mary Beth Garrick, Director of Production Selena Coppock, Senior Editor Calvin Cato, Editor Kristen O’Toole, Editor Meave Shelton, Editor Random House Publishing Team Tom Russell, Publisher Nicole Benhabib, Publishing Director Ellen L Reed, Production Manager Alison Stoltzfus, Managing Editor The Princeton Review, Inc 111 Speen Street, Suite 550 Framingham, MA 01701 E-mail: editorialsupport@review.com Copyright © 2013 by TPR Education IP Holdings, LLC Cover art © Jonathan Pozniak All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions Published in the United States by Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto Excerpt from The Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers Inc Copyright © 2001 by Louise Erdrich Excerpt from Waiting reprinted by permission of Pantheon Books, a division of Random House, Inc Copyright © 1999 by Ha Jin “Brass Spittoons” reprinted by permission of Harold Ober Associates Incorporated Copyright © 1927 by Alfred A Knopf., Inc Copyright renewed 1955 by Langston Hughes “There Is No Frigate Like a Book” reprinted from The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson, edited by Thomas H Johnson, by permission of Little, Brown and Company “Blue Girls” copyright 1927 by Alfred A Knopf, Inc and renewed 1955 by John Crowe Ransom Reprinted from Selected Poems, Third Edition, Revised and Enlarged by John Crowe Ransom, by permission of Alfred A Knopf, Inc “Madman’s Song” copyright 1921 by Alfred A Knopf, Inc and renewed 1949 by William Rose Benét Reprinted by permission of Alfred A Knopf, Inc “Of Studies” reprinted from Seventeenth-Century Prose and Poetry, 2nd ed., edited by Alexander M Witherspoon and Frank J Warnke, by permission of Harcourt Brace and Company “The Mower to the Glowworms” reprinted from Seventeenth-Century Prose and Poetry, 2nd ed., edited by Alexander M Witherspoon and Frank J Warnke, by permission of Harcourt Brace and Company “Promises Like Pie-crust” by Christina Rossetti reprinted from Poems and Prose, edited by Jan Marsh, by permission of J M Dent “The Shoemakers’ Holiday” by Thomas Dekker reprinted from Early Seventeenth Century Dramas, edited by Robert G Lawrence, by permission of J M Dent “The Supper at Elsinore” reprinted from Seven Gothic Tales, by Isak Dinesen, by permission of the Rungstedlund Foundation eBook ISBN: 978-0-307-94573-0 Trade Paperback ISBN: 978-0-307-94553-2 SAT is a registered trademark of the College Board The Princeton Review is not affiliated with Princeton University Editor: Liz Rutzel Production Editor: Koty Zelinka Production Artist: John E Stecyk 2013–2014 Edition v3.1 Acknowledgments I would like to thank the following people who assisted in the writing of this book: Suzanne Markert, Christine Parker, Lisa Liberati, Liz Buffa, and the New York City Public Library A special thanks to Adam Robinson, who conceived of and perfected the Joe Bloggs approach to standardized tests and many of the other successful techniques used by The Princeton Review Contents Cover Title Page Copyright Acknowledgments Part I: Overview The Route to College Approaching the SAT Subject Tests Part II: Cracking the SAT Literature Subject Test Overview Test Strategies Test Strategies for the SAT Literature Subject Test Terms—The Only Stuff You Need to Know Analyzing Prose Poetry Doesn’t Bite Drama Queens (and Kings and Princes and the Occasional Duchess) 10 Final Thoughts 11 Answers and Explanations to Drills Part III: The Princeton Review Practice SAT Literature Subject Tests 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 How to Take the Practice SAT Literature Subject Tests Practice Test Practice Test 1: Answers and Explanations Practice Test Practice Test 2: Answers and Explanations Practice Test Practice Test 3: Answers and Explanations Practice Test Practice Test 4: Answers and Explanations About the Author Part I Overview The Route to College Approaching the SAT Subject Tests Chapter The Route to College WHERE DO STANDARDIZED TESTS COME FROM? If you’ve purchased this book, you are probably preparing to apply to college Part of the long and arduous college admissions process will almost certainly include some standardized tests For most of you, these tests will come from a company called the College Board This company has hired the Educational Testing Service, or ETS, to administer and grade its exams WHAT IS THE PRINCETON REVIEW? The Princeton Review is a test-preparation company We have branches all over the United States and abroad We’ve developed the techniques you’ll nd our books, courses, and online resources by analyzing several years’ worth of actual exams We’ve seen the effectiveness of our techniques in action with thousands of our students Tick Tock We don’t waste your time We tell you what you need to know and, more importantly, what you don’t need to know Our approach is what makes our techniques unique We base our principles on those used by the people who write the test We don’t want to waste your time with information that you don’t need to know We know you’re busy We’re not going to teach you “How to Appreciate Fine English Literature” (although that’s a wonderful thing to know), but rather the information you’ll need to get great score improvements on this test You’ll learn to recognize and comprehend the relatively small amount of information that’s actually tested You’ll also learn to avoid common traps, to think like the test writers, to find answers to challenging questions You need to only three things: trust the techniques, practice them, and then practice some more ... permission of the Rungstedlund Foundation eBook ISBN: 97 8-0 -3 0 7-9 457 3-0 Trade Paperback ISBN: 97 8-0 -3 0 7-9 455 3-2 SAT is a registered trademark of the College Board The Princeton Review is not... information, visit PrincetonReview.com Part II Cracking the SAT Literature Subject Test 10 11 Overview Test Strategies Test Strategies for the SAT Literature Subject Test Terms The Only Stuff You... What Are the SAT Subject Tests? These are a series of one-hour exams administered by ETS Unlike the SAT, the SAT Subject Tests are designed to measure speci c knowledge in speci c areas There are