**AP Literature Official post-test**

<p>A friend of mine made up a book to use on the last prompt. Hilarious stuff, I wish I could have read it.</p>

<p>I thought Antigone was the obvious choice for the last essay, but I think the ones you guys used were pretty unique. I just went with that because it seemed to fit perfectly.</p>

<p>Overall, it was pretty easy. I loved all of the MC passages (in terms of interest level) except the pony one. That one just creeped the ***** out of me. The essays were alright, I guess. Didn’t like the poem or the passage for the two essays but they were doable.</p>

<p>Totally agree with your second paragraph. MC was so interesting except maybe the pony. FRQ passages less so though I liked the poem better than the prose.</p>

<p>I actually like the essay passage because in my class we spent a lot of time reading books like A Doll House and The Awakening with bad marriages so I had a lot to go off and knew what to look for.</p>

<p>Multiple choice: with the exception of the subjectivity of the first poem, this was the easiest lit multiple choice section I’ve ever seen. My teacher gave us some really, really awful released exams as practice. I was pleasantly surprised.</p>

<p>FRQ #1: Noo sweat. Three pages.
FRQ #2: Eh…wasn’t my favorite. Three pages.
FRQ #3: I used The Fountainhead. Four pages.</p>

<p>I didn’t think it was that bad…but agreed, that final prose passage by Samuel Johnson was downright horrific. I used Huck Finn for the essay, especially since I’d already written a similar one on it for class and got a high A. And joshmay94, I heard a couple people in my class saying they used Invisible Man; I’ve never read it though.</p>

<p>My friend: “I wrote my third essay about The Death of Small Wonders (Noise and Silence), the critically and historically acclaimed magnum opus of Karauss.”</p>

<p>I’m still laughing.</p>

<p>I thought the MC overall was relatively easy…the first passage was easy to understand but the questions were slightly tricky, the first poem was definitely the most difficult overall (comprehension and questions), and the last three passage were the three easiest passages I have ever come across in AP Lit (the last prose passage I thought had very easy questions relative to the complex nature of the writing), unless I interpreted any of them incorrectly. I loved FRQ#1, I thought FRQ#2 was annoying (interesting how each prompt essentially asked the same thing), and for FRQ#3…four numbers: 1984. </p>

<p>Oh and one of the answer choices for a question about the second poem was extremely creepy…some of the people in my room literally laughed out loud when they read it.</p>

<p>Pretty easy test. I enjoyed all of the readings. Essays were easy as well, although I used Beowulf for the third one and took forever developing my main point.</p>

<p>TQSMNTASP: everybody here knows what you’re talking about in regards to the sketchy question. I think I read it five times trying to stop laughing in my head and actually focus on answering it. And I agree 100% on the last prose passage. I would be very, very surprised if anybody who wasn’t Christmas treeing or randomly guessing missed the first or last question of that section.</p>

<p>I used Huck Finn for my FRQ. I thought the MC was hard compared to the MC sections that we practiced in class from previous AP exam years.</p>

<p>There were two really weird answers. One that made me LOL and another that was um creepy.</p>

<p>artek1993 - I remember doing a practice test where the last passage was “The Eolian Harp.” That test was really, really hard for me, especially “The Eolian Harp” itself. I think I had something like a 55% for that multiple choice. Today’s MC was much easier, in my opinion.</p>

<p>The specific disturbing question Is missing from my memory! Darn college board and it not letting us talk about questions.</p>

<p>I have no idea what “sketchy” question you guys are talking about. But overall, the only thing that was really hard was the first poem in the mc.</p>

<p>I used Frankenstein for the 3rd essay. </p>

<p>That disturbing line and question on that pony poem was pretty weird. I wish we could say which answer choice we used without violating the rules…</p>

<p>Would someone mind PM-ing me the disturbing question? I have no clue which one you refer to.</p>

<p>same^^^^^someone pm me</p>

<p>The q3 was made for heart of darkness. I can’t believe more people didn’t do it. The test overall was Childs play</p>

<p>I definitely considered using heart of darkness or antigone, but I decided I had to stick with Crime and Punishment for the third essay. It fit so well. Also, I can’t place what the sketchy question was either guys</p>