Essay Topic Hub

Book
Essays

11,810+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

11,810 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
What is Book?

Books as a subject of academic study appear across nearly every discipline, from literature and history to sociology, law, nursing, and business. Students are asked to engage with books not just as vessels of information but as objects of analysis — examining how an author constructs an argument, develops characters, or frames a social issue. The diversity of texts students encounter, ranging from scriptural passages like the Book of Job to sociological works, activist histories such as The Struggle for Black Equality, and narrative nonfiction like Jonathan Harr's A Civil Action, reflects how broadly the act of reading functions as an academic skill and a critical practice.

The papers archived under this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some are chapter-level summaries designed to distill core arguments, while others are full critical analyses that evaluate an author's rhetorical choices, cultural assumptions, or thematic concerns. Comparative readings appear alongside case-based approaches, where a text is placed in dialogue with real-world contexts such as environmental law or leadership practice. Works like Buchi Emecheta's The Joys of Motherhood and Muddy Boots Leadership show how literary and practical texts alike receive close analytical treatment.

A strong essay focused on a book establishes a clear, arguable thesis rather than simply restating what an author says. Evidence should come from specific passages, chapters, or structural choices within the text itself. The most common pitfall is treating summary as analysis — explaining what a book contains without explaining why those choices matter or what they reveal about a larger idea, context, or problem.

11,810 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Democracy the Institution of Democracy
The Institution of Democracy - Origins and Dynamics
Paper Doctorate
Masculinity in the Strange Case
Written by author Robert Louis Stevenson, the Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde was published in 1886 after two separate attempts at writing it. Stevenson threw the first copy of the manuscript into the garbage…
Paper Undergraduate
Race Is a Social, Political
¶ … race is a social, political and ideological construct. Explain the projects of critical race feminism. How have critical race feminists such as bell hooks, Beverly Guy-Sheftall and others explored the history and…
Paper Undergraduate
Popular Diets in Contemporary Society,
In contemporary society, one of the most visible issues facing Americans, and indeed, most of the developed world, is obesity and the link between diet and health. Medical doctors, scholars, researchers are all in…
Paper Undergraduate
Evil Perception and the Existence
Questions of morality -- specifically the question of morality; namely whether morality can truly be said to exist in an objective way -- have increasingly been a matter of importance in literature and thought as…
Paper Doctorate
Ordinary Men Reserve Police Battalion
In Ordinary Men, Christopher R. Browning tells the story of a non-descript German military unit during World War II called the Reserve Police Battalion 101. Through direct interviews with 125 of the Battalion's men…
Paper Undergraduate
Lifting the Corporate Veil Limited
Limited liability and separate personality
Paper Masters
Canada\'s Federal System Affect Economic
In answering this question, you might consider the following (though you should NOT treat them as a series of short answer questions):
Research Paper Doctorate
Colonial Resistance in Thing Fall Apart
Chinua Achebe was born in Ogidi, Nigeria, and his father was a teacher in a missionary school. His parents were devout evangelical Protestants and christened him Albert after Prince Albert, husband of Queen Victoria,…
Paper High School
Moral justification of revenge in The Count of Monte Cristo
This paper looks at the concept of justice in Dumas' Count of Monte Cristo. Dantes seeks revenge on those who wronged him but he may be viewed as morally just in doing so because he represents both God's divine justice (which also includes mercy) and man's natural impulse to seek justice through revenge.