Read "Ghost Me, What's Holy" in Garrett. The story is of Carey, who is not an intellectual, but he is the cousin of the queen. He's one of the few people in that age who wrote an autobiography for his family, some of which is quoted in the story. Garrett's vast knowledge of British history shines in the story and plenty of questions open to the reader, which makes for a good annotation exercise. Students likely learned annotation strategies in English 101. Read about it in the Handbook, or outside, if you need to refresh. In Garrett's story, as you are reading, write questions/comments alongside the sentence at issue. For this Written Assignment, you have two options for submitting your annotations: either written down or by scanning the pages. If submitting written annotations, write the sentence down with the page number and then your annotation. The other option is to scan the pages you've annotated.
ARTS & HUMANITIES
WRITING
ENGLISH 102