The classic reader that has introduced millions of students to the essay as a genre.
The Norton Reader has introduced millions of writing students to the essay as a genre.
Read by millions of students since it was first published in 1965, The Norton Reader is the bestselling collection of its kind.
A collection of writings on sports covers everything from baseball, to snorkeling, to race car driving, and includes stories and essays by Roger Angell, Mark Twain, W.P. Kinsella, John McPhee, Ring Lardner, James Joyce, Don Delillo, and ...
The perfect supplement to introductory psychology texts, The Norton Psychology Reader includes the best contemporary writing on the study of human behavior.
The Little Norton Reader presents 50 essays from the first 50 years of The Norton Reader, classics like the "Letter from Birmingham Jail" along with newer favorites such as "Is Google Making Us Stupid?" and "Fun Home.
The Norton Reader: An Anthology of Expository Prose
Film Analysis offers concise analyses of fifty diverse and historically significant films—each written exclusively for the text by a leading scholar.
The Norton Reader: An Anthology of Nonfiction
Forty-eight NEW selections—concentrated mostly on the twentieth and twenty-first centuries—make the book not only the best overview of the history of theory, but also a remarkably up-to-date portrait of the state of theory today.
This text features an impressive array of readings, including 25 specially-commissioned essays by prominent philosophers.