AP Literature Prose Essay Prompts (1970–2013)
Originally compiled and shared
by Cheryl DeLacretaz, Dripping Springs High
School, Dripping Springs, TX
Updated by Ms. Effie
NOTE: From 1956 (first official administration of AP
tests) through 1979, one AP English examine was given. In 1980, separate
Language and Literature exams were offered. The following prose essay prompts
are from a variety of novels, essays, short stories, and nonfiction sources.
1970 Meredith’s “Ferdinand and Miranda” from The Ordeal of Richard Feveral:
Show how the young woman and the young man in the passage are made to
seem naturally suited for one another.
1971 Orwell’s “Some Thoughts on the Common Toad”: Demonstrate how the speaker establishes his
attitude toward the coming of spring.
1972 Joyce’s “Eveline” from Dubliners: Explain how the author prepares his reader
for Eveline’s final inability or unwillingness to sail to South America with Frank. Consider at least two elements of fictions
such as theme, symbol, setting, image, characterization, or any other aspects
of the narrative artist’s craft.
1973 Dickens’ Hard Times: Explain how the author’s presentation of
details is intended to shape the reader’s attitudes toward the place he
describes — Coketown and the caves. Give
specific attention to the function of word choice, imagery, phrasing, and
sentence structure.
1974 Henry James’s What Maisie
Knew: In the opening lines of the
passage we are told the “new arrangement was inevitably confounding” to
Maisie. Write a descriptive or narrative
piece which presents a person who is undergoing a new experience that is
confounding.
1975 Lagerkvist’s The Marriage
Feast: Define and discuss the
subject of the story. Direct your
remarks to the significance of the events described.
1976 Work/author unknown:
Characterize briefly the world and way of life described in the passage,
discuss the effect of the passage as a whole, and analyze those elements that achieve
this effect.
1977 No prose selection (instead, had the following prompt: A character’s attempt to recapture or reject
the past is important in many plays, novels, and poems. Choose a work in which a character views the
past with such feelings as reverence, bitterness, or longing. Show with clear evidence how the character’s
view of the past is used to develop a theme in the work.)
1978 Johnson’s “Review of ‘A Free Enquiry Into The Nature and Origin
of Evil’”: Analyze Samuel Johnson’s attitude toward writer Soame Jenyns and
treatment of Jenyns’ argument.
1979 Quentin Bell on the Woolf family: Show how style reveals feelings
about family.
1980 Two funerals: Compare the
different authors’ attitudes by examining diction and choice of detail; also
discuss their effect on the reader.
1981 George Bernard Shaw on his mother’s cremation: Analyze how diction and detail convey
attitude.
1982 Stevenson’s “Cat Bill”:
Analyze strategies that make the argument effective for his audience.
1983 Thomas Carlyle’s “Work”:
Examine how he uses language to convince the reader of the rightness of
his position.
1984 Austen’s Emma: Explain how passage characterizes Emma more
than Harriet.
Mailer’s “Death of Benny Paret”: Explain and analyze effect on reader and how
diction, syntax, imagery, and tone produce that effect. (Two prose prompts; no
poem)
1985 Hemingway’s A Farewell to
Arms: Compare two drafts of a
passage from A Farewell to Arms and
analyze the effect of revisions.
1986 Dickens’ Dombey and Son: Define narrator’s attitude toward characters
through imagery, diction, narrative structure, choice of detail.
1987 George Eliot’s “Leisure” from Adam
Bede: Describe her two views of leisure and discuss stylistic devices she
uses to convey those views.
1988 Updike’s “Reunion”:
Analyze blend of humor, pathos, and grotesque in their story.
1989 Conrad’s “Captain MacWhirr” from Typhoon: Define attitude of
speaker toward Captain and analyze techniques he uses to define Captain’s
character.
1990 Didion’s “Self-deception - Self-respect”: Show how style and tone help convey attitude.
1991 Boswell’s The Life of
Samuel Johnson: Discuss the ways
Boswell differentiates between the writing of Addison and Johnson.
1992 Beginning and ending of Tillie Olsen’s “I Stand Here
Ironing”: Analyze the narrative
techniques and other resources of language Olsen uses to characterize the
mother and her attitude.
1993 Lytton Strachey’s conception of Florence Nightingale: Define Strachey’s view and analyze how he
conveys it.
1994 Sarah Jewett’s “A White Heron”:
Show how the author dramatizes the young heroine’s adventure using
diction, imagery, narrative pace, and point of view.
1995 Sandra Cisneros’ “Eleven”:
Show how the author uses literary techniques to characterize Rachel.
1996 Hawthorne’s “Judge Pyncheon” from House of the Seven Gables:
Analyze how the narrator reveals the character of Judge Pyncheon. Emphasize such devices as tone, selection of
detail, syntax, point of view.
1997 Joy Kogawa’s Obasan: Analyze how changes in perspective and style
reflect the narrator’s complex attitude toward the past. Consider elements such
as point of view, structure, selection of detail, and figurative language.
1998 George Eliot’s Middlemarch: Write an essay in which you characterize the
narrator’s attitude toward Dorothea Brooke and analyze the literary techniques
used to convey this attitude.
1999 Cormac McCarthy’s The
Crossing: Show how the author’s
techniques convey the impact of the experience on the main character.
2000 Joseph Addison’s The Spectator (March 4, 1712): Analyze how the language of the passage characterizes
the diarist and his society and how the characterization serves Addison’s
satiric purpose. Consider such elements
as selection of detail, repetition, and tone.
2001 Henry Fielding’s Tom Jones
(1749): Analyze the techniques that
Fielding employs in this scene to characterize Mr. Allworthy and Mrs. Deborah
Wilkins.
2002 Alain de Botton’s Kiss and
Tell: Write an essay in which you
analyze how the author produces a comic effect.
2002B Annie Proulx’s The Shipping
News: Note the author’s use of such
elements as diction, syntax, imagery, and figurative language. Analyze how the author’s use of language
generates a vivid impression of Quoyle as a character.
2003 Mavis Gallant’s “The Other Paris”: Explain how the author uses narrative voice
and characterization to provide social commentary.
2003B Joyce Carol Oates’s We Were
the Mulvaneys (1996): Analyze the
literary techniques Oates uses to characterize the speaker, Judd Mulvaney.
Support with specific references to the passage.
2004 Henry James’s “The Pupil” (1891):
Analyze the author’s depiction of the three characters and the
relationships among them. Pay particular
attention to tone and point of view.
2004B Elizabeth Gaskell’s Mary
Barton (1848): This is from a novel
about mill workers living in Manchester, England, in the 1840’s. Analyze how Gaskell uses elements such as
point of view, selection of detail, dialogue, and characterization to make a
social commentary.
2005 Katharine Brush’s “Birthday Party” (1946): Write an essay in
which you show how the author uses literary devices to achieve her purpose.
2005B Norris’ McTeague: A Story of
San Francisco: Discuss how the characterization in the passage reflects the
narrator’s attitude toward McTeague.
Consider such elements as diction, tone, detail, and syntax.
2006 Oscar Wilde’s Lady
Windermere’s Fan (1892): Analyze how
the playwright reveals the values of the characters and the nature of their
society.
2006B From “a nineteenth-century novel”:
Discuss how the narrator’s style reveals his attitudes toward the people
he describes.
2007 Dalton Trumbo’s Johnny Got
His Gun: Analyze how Trumbo uses such techniques as point of view,
selection of detail, and syntax to characterize the relationship between the
young man and his father.
2007B Seamus Deane reflecting on his childhood experiences with books and
writing: Analyze how Deane conveys the
impact those early experiences had on him.
2008 Aran from Anita Desai’s Fasting,
Feasting (1999): Analyze how the author uses such literary devices as
speech and point of view to characterize Aran’s experience.
2008B Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey
(1818): Analyze the literary techniques Austen uses to characterize Catherine
Morland.
2009 Ann Petry’s The Street
(1946): Analyze how Petry establishes Lutie Johnson’s relationship to the urban
setting through the use of literary devices such as imagery, personification,
selection of detail, and figurative language.
2009B Zorah Neale Hurston’s Seraph on the Suwanee (1948): Analyze the literary techniques Hurston uses to describe
Sawley and to characterize the people who live there.
2010 Maria Edgeworth’s Belinda (1801):
The narrator provides a description of Clarence Harvey, one of the suitors of
the novel’s protagonist, Belinda Portman. Read the passage carefully. Then
write an essay in which you analyze Clarence Hervey’s complex character as
Edgeworth develops it through such literary techniques as tone, point of view,
and language.
2010B Maxine Clair’s “Cherry Bomb”: Write an essay in which you analyze
how Clair uses literary techniques to characterize the adult narrator’s
memories of her fifth-grade summer world.
2011 George Eliot’s Middlemarch (1874): In the passage, Rosamond and Tertius
Lydgate, a recently married couple, confront financial difficulties. Read the
passage carefully. Then write a well-developed essay in which you analyze how
Eliot portrays these two characters and their complex relationship as husband
and wife. You may wish to consider such literary devices as narrative
perspective and selection of detail.
2011B Tomson Highway’s Kiss of the
Fur Queen (1998): The following passage is the opening of the novel by the
Cree novelist and playwright Tomson Highway. Read the passage carefully. Then
write a well-organized essay in which you analyze how Highway uses literary
devices to dramatize Okimasis’ experience.
2012 Helena María Viramontes’s Under
the Feet of Jesus: Carefully read the following excerpt from the novel.
Then write a well-organized essay in which you analyze the development of
Estrella’s character. In your analysis, you may wish to consider such literary
elements as selection of detail, figurative language, and tone.
2013 D. H. Lawrence’s The
Rainbow (1915): The following passage focuses on the lives of the Brangwens,
a farming family who lived in rural England during the late nineteenth century.
Read the passage carefully. Then write an essay in which you analyze how
Lawrence employs literary devices to characterize the woman and capture her
situation.
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