did-you-know? rent-now

Amazon no longer offers textbook rentals. We do!

did-you-know? rent-now

Amazon no longer offers textbook rentals. We do!

We're the #1 textbook rental company. Let us show you why.

9780813531625

The New Anthology of American Poetry

by ; ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780813531625

  • ISBN10:

    0813531624

  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2003-01-01
  • Publisher: Rutgers Univ Pr

Note: Supplemental materials are not guaranteed with Rental or Used book purchases.

Purchase Benefits

  • Free Shipping Icon Free Shipping On Orders Over $35!
    Your order must be $35 or more to qualify for free economy shipping. Bulk sales, PO's, Marketplace items, eBooks and apparel do not qualify for this offer.
  • eCampus.com Logo Get Rewarded for Ordering Your Textbooks! Enroll Now
List Price: $54.95 Save up to $21.98
  • Rent Book $32.97
    Add to Cart Free Shipping Icon Free Shipping

    TERM
    PRICE
    DUE
    USUALLY SHIPS IN 24-48 HOURS
    *This item is part of an exclusive publisher rental program and requires an additional convenience fee. This fee will be reflected in the shopping cart.

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

Summary

When completed, this three-volume anthology will be the most balanced, inclusive, and comprehensive anthology of American poetry ever published. The New Anthology of American Poetryis designed to become the standard text for college courses in American poetry, and it will also appeal to general readers who wish to explore the range and diversity of this literary form. The series demonstrates how a succession of canons of American poetry have evolved, with certain poets silenced until the present day, while others who emerged and then faded are now ready to be retrieved. Readers will find more attention devoted to women poets and to artists from African American, Asian American, Latino, and Native American cultures than in any previous anthology. Readers will also encounter an extremely solid presentation of long-established writers. The anthology offers not just a unique and teachable selection of poets and poems, but also concise introductions to periods and styles, brief bibliographies of key primary and secondary texts, and critical selections on the art of poetry by the anthologized poets themselves. VOLUME I: Traditions and Revolutions, Beginnings to 1900 Volume I begins with a generous selection of Native American materials, then spans the years from the establishment of the American colonies to about 1900, a world on the brink of World War I and the modern era. Part One focuses on poetry from the very beginnings through the end of the eighteenth century. The expansion and development of a newly forged nation engendered new kinds of poetry. Part Two includes works from the early nineteenth century through the time of the Civil War. The poems in Part Three reflect the many issues affecting a nation undergoing tumultuous change: the Civil War, immigration, urbanization, industrialization, and cultural diversification. Such well-recognized names as Anne Bradstreet, Edward Taylor, Phillis Wheatley, Edgar Allan Poe, Herman Melville, Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson, and Stephen Crane appear in this anthology alongside such less frequently anthologized poets as George Horton, Sarah Helen Whitman, Elizabeth Oakes-Smith, Frances Harper, Rose Terry Cooke, Helen Hunt Jackson, Adah Menken, Sarah Piatt, Ina Coolbrith, Emma Lazarus, Albery Whitman, Owl Woman (Juana Manwell) Sadakichi Hartmann, Ernest Fenollosa, James Weldon Johnson, Paul Laurence Dunbar, and-virtually unknown as a poet-Abraham Lincoln. It also includes poems and songs reflecting the experiences of a variety of racial and ethnic groups.

Table of Contents

Preface xxv
Acknowledgments xxix
PART ONE: PRE-COLUMBIAN PERIOD TO 1800
Introduction
3(2)
Native-American Songs, Ritual Poetry, and Lyric Poetry (Pre-1492--1800)
5(27)
The Tree of the Great Peace [Iroquois]
6(1)
Sayatasha's Night Chant [Zuni]
7(20)
Song [Copper Eskimo]
27(1)
Love Song [Aleut]
28(1)
Song of Repulse to a Vain Lover [Makah] To'ak
28(1)
Formula to Secure Love [Cherokee]
28(1)
Formula to Cause Death [Cherokee] A'yunini, or the Swimmer
29(1)
Woman's Song [Chippewa]
30(1)
Song of War [Chippewa] Odjib'we
31(1)
Song for Bringing a Child into the World [Seminole]
31(1)
Song for the Dying [Seminole]
31(1)
Gaspar Perez De Villagra (1555--1620)
32(10)
From Historia de la Nueva Mexico/The History of New Mexico Canto Primero/Canto 1
33(9)
Anne Bradstreet (ca. 1612--1672)
42(25)
The Prologue
43(2)
An Epitaph on My Dear and Ever Honored Mother
45(1)
The Author to Her Book
46(1)
Contemplations
47(8)
The Flesh and the Spirit
55(3)
To Her Father with Some Verses
58(1)
To My Dear and Loving Husband
58(1)
A Letter to Her Husband, Absent upon Public Employment
59(1)
Before the Birth of One of Her Children
60(1)
In Reference to Her Children
60(3)
For Deliverance from a Fever
63(1)
In Memory of My Dear Grandchild Elizabeth Bradstreet
64(1)
Verses upon the Burning of Our House
64(2)
As Weary Pilgrim
66(1)
Michael Wigglesworth (1631--1705)
67(8)
From The Day of Doom
68(7)
Edward Taylor (ca. 1642--1729)
75(18)
From Preparatory Meditations
Prologue
77(1)
Meditation 8 (First Series)
78(1)
Meditation 16 (First Series)
79(2)
Meditation 22 (First Series)
81(1)
Meditation 39 (First Series)
82(2)
Meditation 42 (First Series)
84(1)
Meditation 150 (Second Series)
85(1)
From God's Determinations
The Preface
86(1)
From Miscellaneous Poems
Upon a Spider Catching a Fly
87(2)
Upon a Wasp Chilled with Cold
89(1)
Huswifery
90(1)
Upon Wedlock, and Death of Children
91(2)
Lucy Terry (ca. 1730--1821)
93(2)
Bars Fight
94(1)
Philip Freneau (1752--1832)
95(9)
To Sir Toby
97(2)
On the Emigration to America and Peopling the Western Country
99(1)
The Wild Honey Suckle
100(1)
The Indian Burying Ground
101(2)
On Mr. Paine's Rights of Man
103(1)
Phillis Wheatley (ca. 1753--1784)
104(11)
On Being Brought from Africa to America
106(1)
To the University of Cambridge, in New England
107(1)
On the Death of the Rev. Mr. George Whitefield, 1770
108(1)
On Imagination
109(2)
To the Right Honourable William, Earl of Dartmouth
111(2)
To S. M., a Young African Painter, on Seeing His Works
113(1)
To His Excellency General Washington
114(1)
Joel Barlow (1754--1812)
115(6)
From The Hasty Pudding
Canto 1
116(5)
Songs of the American Revolution and New Nation
121(20)
Patriot Lyrics
The Liberty Song
122(1)
Chester
123(1)
Alphabet
124(1)
The King's own Regulars; And their Triumphs over the Irregulars
125(2)
The Irishman's Epistle to the Officers and Troops at Boston
127(1)
The Yankee's Return from Camp
128(2)
The Public Spirit of the Women
130(1)
A Toast to Washington
130(1)
Francis Hopkinson
Adams and Liberty
131(1)
Thomas Paine
Loyalist Lyrics
When Good Queen Elizabeth Governed the Realm
132(1)
Song for a Fishing Party
133(1)
Burrowing Yankees
134(1)
A Refugee Song
134(5)
PART TWO: EARLY TO MID-NINETEENTH CENTURY
Introduction
139(2)
African-American Slave Songs (1800--1863)
141(6)
Go Down, Moses
142(1)
Many Thousand Gone
143(1)
Michael Row the Boat Ashore
144(1)
Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Had
145(1)
Roll, Jordan, Roll
146(1)
There's a Meeting Here To-Night
146(1)
Native-American Songs, Ritual Poetry, and Lyric Poetry (1800--1900)
147(12)
From The Mountain Chant [Navajo]
One of the Awl Songs
148(1)
Last Song of the Exploding Stick
149(1)
From The Night Chant [Navajo]
Song in the Rock
149(1)
Last Song in the Rock
150(1)
Prayer of First Dancers
150(3)
Song of the Earth [Navajo]
153(2)
The Dancing Speech of O-No'-Sa [Iroquois]
155(1)
Six Dream Songs
You and I Shall Go [Wintu]
155(1)
Minnows and Flowers [Wintu]
155(1)
Sleep [Wintu]
156(1)
Dandelion Puffs [Wintu]
156(1)
There Above [Wintu]
156(1)
Strange Flowers [Wintu]
157(1)
Ghost Dance Songs
[The Father Says So] [Sioux]
157(1)
[Give Me Back My Bow] [Sioux]
157(1)
[The Whole World Is Coming] [Sioux]
158(1)
Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney (1791--1865)
159(3)
The Suttee
159(2)
Indian Names
161(1)
William Cullen Bryant (1794--1878)
162(11)
Thanatopsis
164(2)
To a Waterfowl
166(1)
An Indian Story
167(3)
A Scene on the Banks of the Hudson
170(1)
Hymn of the City
171(1)
The Death of Lincoln
172(1)
George Moses Horton (ca. 1797--1883)
173(2)
On Liberty and Slavery
173(2)
Jane Johnston Schoolcraft [Bame-Wa-Wa-Ge-Zhik-A-Quay, Woman of the Stars Rushing Through the Sky] (1800--1841)
175(2)
To Sisters on a Walk in the Garden, after a Shower
176(1)
From The Forsaken Brother, a Chippewa Tale Neesya, neesya, shyegwuh gushuh/My brother, my brother
176(1)
Sarah Helen Whitman (1803--1878)
177(5)
The Raven
179(2)
From Sonnets [to Poe]
181(1)
To ----
182(1)
Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803--1882)
182(38)
Concord Hymn
185(1)
Each and All
185(2)
The Rhodora
187(1)
The Snow-Storm
187(1)
The Humble-Bee
188(3)
Hamatreya
191(2)
Merlin
193(3)
Ode, Inscribed to W. H. Channing
196(4)
Days
200(1)
Brahma
200(1)
From Voluntaries
201(1)
Prose
The Poet
202(17)
Letter to Walt Whitman
219(1)
Elizabeth Oakes Smith (1806--1893)
220(1)
The Unattained
221(1)
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807--1882)
221(38)
A Psalm of Life
226(1)
Hymn to the Night
227(1)
The Wreck of the Hesperus
228(3)
Mezzo Cammin
231(1)
The Day Is Done
232(1)
The Bridge
233(2)
From Evangeline
[Prologue]
235(1)
My Lost Youth
236(2)
The Jewish Cemetery at Newport
238(3)
From The Song of Hiawatha
Hiawatha's Fasting
241(7)
Picture-Writing
248(5)
The Landlord's Tale: Paul Revere's Ride
253(3)
Aftermath
256(1)
Milton
257(1)
Nature
257(1)
The Tide Rises, the Tide Falls
258(1)
The Cross of Snow
258(1)
John Greenleaf Whittier (1807--1892)
259(35)
Massachusetts to Virginia
261(4)
Ichabod!
265(1)
Skipper Ireson's Ride
266(4)
Telling the Bees
270(2)
Snow-Bound
272(22)
Edgar Allan Poe (1809--1849)
294(35)
[Alone]
298(1)
Sonnet---To Science
299(1)
Romance
299(1)
To Helen
300(1)
Israfel
301(1)
The City in the Sea
302(2)
The Haunted Palace
304(1)
The Raven
305(4)
Ulalume
309(3)
Eldorado
312(1)
To Helen
313(2)
To My Mother
315(1)
The Bells
315(3)
Annabel Lee
318(2)
Prose
The Philosophy of Composition
320(9)
Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809--1894)
329(12)
Old Ironsides
330(1)
The Chambered Nautilus
331(2)
The Deacon's Masterpiece, or The Wonderful One-Hoss Shay
333(4)
The Flaneur
337(4)
Abraham Lincoln (1809--1865)
341(5)
My Childhood Home I See Again
343(3)
Margaret Fuller (1810--1850)
346(4)
Meditations
347(3)
Frances Sargent Locke Osgood (1811--1850)
350(5)
The Maiden's Mistake
351(1)
The Wraith of the Rose
352(1)
Lines
353(1)
The Hand That Swept the Sounding Lyre
354(1)
Ada [Sarah Louisa Forten] (ca. 1814--1898)
355(3)
The Slave Girl's Farewell
356(1)
The Slave
357(1)
Henry David Thoreau (1817--1862)
358(5)
Sic Vita
359(2)
Haze
361(1)
Smoke
361(1)
My life has been the poem I would have writ
362(1)
Mist
362(1)
Between the traveller and the setting sun
362(1)
Julia Ward Howe (1819--1910)
363(2)
Battle Hymn of the Republic
364(1)
Herman Melville (1819--1891)
365(11)
From Battle-Pieces and Aspects of the War The Portent
367(1)
The March into Virginia
368(1)
Shiloh
369(1)
A Utilitarian View of the Monitor's Fight
370(1)
The House-Top
371(1)
The College Colonel
372(1)
The Apparition
373(1)
Other Poems
The Maldive Shark
374(1)
Art
374(1)
Monody
375(1)
James Russell Lowell (1819--1891)
376(4)
From A Fable for Critics
Ralph Waldo Emerson
377(2)
Edgar Allan Poe
379(1)
James Russell Lowell
379(1)
Walt Whitman (1819--1892)
380(89)
Song of Myself
384(48)
There Was a Child Went Forth
432(2)
Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking
434(5)
As I Ebb'd with the Ocean of Life
439(2)
I Sit and Look Out
441(1)
Native Moments
442(1)
Once I Pass'd through a Populous City
442(1)
Facing West from California's Shores
443(1)
As Adam Early in the Morning
443(1)
In Paths Untrodden
443(1)
Hours Continuing Long
444(1)
Trickle Drops
445(1)
City of Orgies
445(1)
Behold This Swarthy Face
445(1)
I Saw in Louisiana a Live-Oak Growing
446(1)
Here the Frailest Leaves of Me
446(1)
A Hand-Mirror
446(1)
When I Heard the Learn'd Astronomer
447(1)
Cavalry Crossing a Ford
447(1)
The Wound-Dresser
448(2)
Vigil Strange I Kept on the Field One Night
450(1)
Bivouac on a Mountain Side
451(1)
When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd
451(7)
Reconciliation
458(1)
One's-Self I Sing
458(1)
A Noiseless Patient Spider
459(1)
Passage to India
459(9)
The Dalliance of the Eagles
468(1)
Good-Bye My Fancy!
468(1)
Alice Cary (1820--1871)
469(2)
The Sea-Side Cave
470(1)
Contradiction
471(1)
Frederick Goddard Tuckerman (1821--1873)
471(6)
Sonnets
472(1)
The Cricket
473(4)
Phoebe Cary (1824--1871)
477(4)
Dorothy's Dower
478(2)
Samuel Brown
480(1)
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (1825--1911)
481(16)
The Slave Mother
484(1)
Bible Defence of Slavery
485(1)
The Slave Auction
486(1)
Lines
487(1)
The Slave Mother, a Tale of the Ohio
488(2)
Bury Me in a Free Land
490(2)
Aunt Chloe's Politics
492(1)
Learning to Read
492(2)
Church Building
494(1)
A Double Standard
495(2)
Maria White Lowell (1827--1853)
497(7)
Africa
498(3)
The Sick-Room
501(1)
An Opium Fantasy
502(2)
Rose Terry Cooke (1827--1892)
504(12)
Captive
505(1)
Blue-Beard's Closet
506(1)
``Che Sara Sara''
507(1)
Semele
508(1)
A Hospital Soliloquy
509(2)
Schemhammphorasch
511(3)
Arachne
514(1)
R. W. Emerson
515(1)
John Rollin Ridge (1827--1867)
516(2)
The Stolen White Girl
517(1)
Henry Timrod (1828--1867)
518(1)
Ode
518(1)
Hawai'ian Plantation Work Songs (1825--1930)
519(4)
Uya Anma/My Mother Dear Nae Nakasone
521(1)
Hana-Hana: Working
521(1)
The Five O'Clock Whistle!
522(1)
Hole Hole Bushi/Stripping Leaves from Sugarcane
523(1)
Jinshan Ge/Songs of Gold Mountain (1838--1920)
523(1)
[Jinshan Fu Xing]/Song of the Wife of a Gold Mountain Man
524(1)
Popular European-American Songs
524(13)
On Top of Old Smoky
525(1)
Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie
526(1)
Clementine
527(1)
Aura Lee
528(1)
The Battle Cry of Freedom
528(1)
Tenting on the Old Camp Ground
529(1)
When Johnny Comes Marching Home
530(1)
Come Home, Father Henry Clay Work
530(1)
I'll Take You Home Again, Kathleen
531(1)
From America, the Beautiful Katherine Lee Bates
532(3)
PART THREE: LATER NINETEENTH CENTURY
Introduction
535(2)
Corridos (1860s--1930s)
537(3)
Kiansis I/Kansas 1
538(2)
Zaragoza Clubs (1860s)
540(2)
Mejico libre ha de ser/Mexico will be free Merced J. de Gonzales
540(1)
En la antigua Roma habia/In ancient Rome there stood Filomena Ibarra
541(1)
Dewitt Clinton Duncan [Too-Qua-Stee] (1829--1909)
542(3)
The Dead Nation
544(1)
Helen Hunt Jackson (1830--1885)
545(3)
Found Frozen
546(1)
Danger
546(1)
Cheyenne Mountain
547(1)
Emily Dickinson (1830--1886)
548(41)
I never lost as much but twice
552(1)
Success is counted sweetest
552(1)
These are the days when birds come back
553(1)
The daisy follows soft the sun
553(1)
Title divine is mine!
554(1)
``Faith'' is a fine invention
554(1)
I taste a liquor never brewed
555(1)
We dont cry - Tim and I
555(1)
I'm nobody! Who are you?
556(1)
Wild nights - Wild nights!
557(1)
There's a certain slant of light
557(1)
I felt a funeral in my brain
558(1)
I'm ceded - I've stopped being their's
559(1)
It was not death, for I stood up
559(1)
A bird came down the walk
560(1)
The soul has bandaged moments
561(1)
After great pain a formal feeling comes
562(1)
This world is not conclusion
562(1)
One need not be a chamber to be haunted
563(1)
The soul selects her own society
564(1)
I had been hungry all the years
564(1)
They shut me up in prose
565(1)
This was a poet
565(1)
I died for beauty but was scarce
566(1)
I dwell in possibility
566(1)
I was the slightest in the house
567(1)
Because I could not stop for death
567(1)
A still volcano life
568(1)
This is my letter to the world
569(1)
For largest woman's heart I knew
569(1)
I heard a fly buzz when I died
569(1)
The brain is wider than the sky
570(1)
Much madness is divinest sense
570(1)
I've seen a dying eye
571(1)
I started early - took my dog
571(1)
I cannot live with you
572(2)
Pain has an element of blank
574(1)
My life had stood a loaded gun
574(1)
Publication is the auction
575(1)
This consciousness that is aware
575(1)
Color - caste - denomination
576(1)
She rose to his requirement - dropt
577(1)
Under the light yet under
577(1)
A narrow fellow in the grass
578(1)
The bustle in a house
578(1)
Tell all the truth but tell it slant
579(1)
What mystery pervades a well!
579(1)
Volcanoes be in Sicily
580(1)
My life closed twice before it's close
580(1)
Letters
To Susan Gilbert (Dickinson) (June 27, 1852)
581(1)
To Samuel Bowles (About February 1861)
582(1)
To recipient unknown (About 1861)
582(2)
To Thomas Wentworth Higginson (April 15, 1862)
584(1)
To Thomas Wentworth Higginson (April 25, 1862)
585(1)
To Thomas Wentworth Higginson (June 7, 1862)
586(1)
To Thomas Wentworth Higginson (July 1862)
587(1)
To Otis P. Lord (About 1878)
588(1)
To Susan Gilbert Dickinson (About 1884)
588(1)
Adah Isaacs Menken (ca. 1835--1868)
589(6)
Myself
591(2)
A Memory
593(1)
Infelix
594(1)
Sarah M. B. Piatt (1836--1919)
595(10)
Giving Back the Flower
597(1)
Shapes of a Soul
598(1)
A Hundred Years Ago
599(1)
The Palace-Burner
600(1)
Her Blindness in Grief
601(2)
We Two
603(1)
The Witch in the Glass
604(1)
Lydia Kamakaeha [Queen Lili'Uokalani] (1838--1917)
605(5)
Aloha `Oe/Farewell to Thee
606(1)
Ku'u Pua I Paoa-ka-lani/My Flower at Paoa-ka-lani
607(1)
Sanoe/Sanoe
608(2)
Ina Coolbrith (1841--1928)
610(7)
The Mariposa Lily
611(1)
The Sea-Shell
612(1)
The Captive of the White City
612(3)
Sailed
615(1)
Woman
615(2)
Sidney Lanier (1842--1881)
617(4)
The Marshes of Glynn
618(3)
Emma Lazarus (1849--1887)
621(10)
Long Island Sound
623(1)
The Cranes of Ibycus
624(1)
The South
624(2)
Echoes
626(1)
City Visions
627(1)
In Exile
628(1)
The New Colossus
629(1)
1492
630(1)
Venus of the Louvre
630(1)
Sarah Orne Jewett (1849--1909)
631(2)
A Caged Bird
632(1)
Albery Allson Whitman (1851--1901)
633(13)
From The Octoroon
635(11)
Edwin Markham (1852--1940)
646(3)
The Man with the Hoe
647(2)
Preparedness
649(1)
Outwitted
649(1)
Jose Marti (1853--1895)
649(7)
From Versos sencillos/Simple Verses
650(6)
Ernest Francisco Fenollosa (1853--1908)
656(3)
The Wood Dove
658(1)
Fuji at Sunrise
659(1)
Louise Imogen Guiney (1861--1920)
659(4)
Tarpeia
660(2)
Planting the Poplar
662(1)
Mary McNeil Fenollosa (1865--1954)
663(3)
Miyoko San
664(1)
Yuki
665(1)
Owl Woman [Juana Manwell] (1867--1957)
666(3)
From Songs for Treating Sickness, Parts One and Two
667(2)
Sadakichi Hartmann (1867--1944)
669(7)
Cyanogen Seas Are Surging
671(1)
From My Rubaiyat
672(2)
Tanka
674(2)
From Haikai
676(1)
Edgar Lee Masters (1868--1950)
676(3)
From Spoon River Anthology
The Unknown
677(1)
Elsa Wertman
678(1)
Hamilton Greene
679(1)
W. E. B. Du Bois (1868--1963)
679(6)
A Litany of Atlanta
680(3)
My Country 'Tis of Thee
683(1)
The Quadroon
684(1)
William Vaughn Moody (1869--1910)
685(8)
The Bracelet of Grass
685(1)
An Ode in Time of Hesitation
686(7)
Edwin Arlington Robinson (1869--1935)
693(13)
The House on the Hill
695(1)
The Children of the Night
696(1)
John Evereldown
697(1)
Luke Havergal
698(1)
Richard Cory
699(1)
Calverly's
700(1)
Miniver Cheevy
701(1)
Eros Turannos
702(1)
The Mill
703(1)
Mr. Flood's Party
704(2)
Stephen Crane (1871--1900)
706(6)
From The Black Riders and Other Lines
1 (``Black riders came from the sea'')
707(1)
3 (``In the desert'')
707(1)
9 (``I stood upon a high place'')
708(1)
19 (``A god in wrath'')
708(1)
24 (``I saw a man pursuing the horizon'')
708(1)
27 (``A youth in apparel that glittered'')
709(1)
46 (``Many red devils ran from my heart'')
709(1)
56 (``A man feared that he might find an assassin'')
710(1)
From War is Kind
76 (``Do not weep, maiden, for war is kind'')
710(1)
96 (``A man said to the universe'')
711(1)
Posthumously Published Poems
113 (``A man adrift on a slim spar'')
711(1)
James Weldon Johnson (1871--1938)
712(3)
O Black and Unknown Bards
713(1)
My City
714(1)
Paul Laurence Dunbar (1872--1906)
715(14)
Accountability
718(1)
The Mystery
719(1)
A Summer's Night
719(1)
We Wear the Mask
720(1)
When Malindy Sings
720(3)
Dawn
723(1)
Sympathy
723(1)
The Poet
724(1)
Douglass
724(1)
The Debt
725(1)
The Haunted Oak
725(2)
To Alice Dunbar
727(1)
Compensation
728(1)
About the Editors 729(2)
Index 731

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

Rewards Program