时间:2019-01-17 作者:英语课 分类:2018年NPR美国国家公共电台6月


英语课

 


STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:


Nancy Pearl is with us once again. It's the first day of summer, and Nancy, who regularly brings us book recommendations, has some for summer reading. Hope you get a chance to check them out. Hi there, Nancy.


NANCY PEARL: Hi, Steve.


INSKEEP: I'm just going to go through this stack that you've sent me and start at the beginning. "Mozart's Starling" is on your stack here. Lyanda Lynn Haupt. Am I saying that name correctly?


PEARL: You are, indeed.


INSKEEP: OK. What's going on here?


PEARL: So Lyanda is a naturalist 1. She's an eco-philosopher. All of her books deal with getting to know nature in your neighborhood.


INSKEEP: Can I just interrupt to mention...


PEARL: Yes.


INSKEEP: ...the author photo on the back shows her with a bird perching on her head.


PEARL: Yes. And this bird is the starling that is the subject of "Mozart's Starling." So it turned out that she became interested in Mozart because the story is that he was walking in Vienna down the street and he heard a bird singing a section of a concerto 2 that he had just finished composing.


INSKEEP: (Laughter) That he had just finished composing? Wow.


PEARL: Correct. Correct. And that just captivated Lyanda. So she and her husband procured 3 a baby starling that she proceeded to raise. And so this is a book both about what it's like to have a bird in your house flying around, but also interspersed 4 with this biography of Mozart and Mozart's relationship with his starling.


INSKEEP: OK. So we've got starlings. We also have a book here called "The Trouble With Goats And Sheep." What on earth is the trouble with goats and sheep?


PEARL: Well, I can't tell you that exactly 'cause that might give away too much. But what I can tell you is this is a fabulous 5 first novel by Joanna Cannon 6, set in 1976 in a small village in England. It's one of the hottest summers on record there, and one of the women in this neighborhood has disappeared. Mrs. Creasy is nowhere to be found, and no one knows where she's gone. And two little girls, Tilly and Grace, decide they are going to find out what happened to Mrs. Creasy. So this is a little bit of a mystery, but more, it's an examination of a group of people all with secrets of their own and the fear that some of those secrets are going to come out because of the girls' inquisitiveness 7. But it's laced with the absolute just wonderful, wonderful touches of humor, including an absolutely priceless scene when Tilly and Grace make one of their regular trips to the library and are looking for something good to read. I loved this book.


INSKEEP: So we've got a book here called "1947: Where Now Begins."


PEARL: This is exactly the kind of history that I love to read. What Elisabeth Asbrink has done is take one particular year, 1947, two years after the end of World War II, and go through month by month talking about everything that happened during those months. And the book is interwoven with her father's story, who spent 1947 in an orphanage 8 in Germany, and his experiences. So there's so much in here. I mean, it's one of those books that I kept marking it up with bookmarks that the book kind of grew to twice its normal size because there was all these notes that I took, and I mean, it's just one of those books that makes you want to major in history. You know? It just is the best nonfiction book that I've read recently.


INSKEEP: Wow.


PEARL: Yes.


INSKEEP: So so Louisa Luna is the author of a novel that you've got on this stack that you sent me, "Two Girls Down."


PEARL: I picked this one up because I'm always looking for a good thriller 9. The two main characters, one of them is a bounty 10 hunter named Alice Vega, lives in California, but she's called to come to a small town in Pennsylvania where two sisters have been kidnapped. And she has had great success in finding missing children before. And she goes to work with a disgraced policeman from the town's police force. And the two of them together make this very interesting team, bringing their separate talents together to try to locate these two girls.


INSKEEP: My favorite part of your description is you say a bounty hunter named - and the mind naturally is expecting a male name. That's a stereotypically 11 male character. But then you say a bounty hunter named Alice Vega. So she went a different direction here. And that's really interesting.


PEARL: Correct.


INSKEEP: Does "Seven-Day Magic" have a strong dragon character in it?


PEARL: (Laughter).


INSKEEP: I guess we should explain. There's a book here, "Seven-Day Magic," by Edward Eager.


PEARL: So there are two kinds of fantasy for children, and the one that has taken precedence is the type of fantasy where there's a magic world, where magic occurs in the world. Everybody knows that. So, you know, the "Harry 12 Potter" books are the best example of that.


INSKEEP: Sure.


PEARL: But in the 20th century, the big kind of fantasy were books in which ordinary boys and girls find something that's magic and they have to, as you learn when you read this book, you find the magic, you tame the magic and then you use the magic. But I especially wanted to talk about this one because it's about a magic book, and these five children go to the library. They see this book just lying on the shelf. It doesn't have a nice cover. It looks very worn. When they check it out, the librarian gives them a very interested look. It's only a seven-day book. And what we do is follow seven days of what happens to them as they gradually use the magic in the book. Fabulous.


INSKEEP: So a magic book. This is pretty much a metaphor 13 for your whole life as a librarian?


PEARL: (Laughter). It is. It absolutely is because there's a great line in this book. Every time somebody different holds the book, it becomes exactly the kind of book that they want to read. Isn't that wonderful?


INSKEEP: Nancy, thanks for sending these book recommendations to us. Really appreciate it.


PEARL: My pleasure, Steve.


INSKEEP: Summer reading from Nancy Pearl, who's a librarian and also a novelist, the author of "George And Lizzie: A Novel." And you can find all of her recommendations at npr.org.



n.博物学家(尤指直接观察动植物者)
  • He was a printer by trade and naturalist by avocation.他从事印刷业,同时是个博物学爱好者。
  • The naturalist told us many stories about birds.博物学家给我们讲述了许多有关鸟儿的故事。
n.协奏曲
  • The piano concerto was well rendered.钢琴协奏曲演奏得很好。
  • The concert ended with a Mozart violin concerto.音乐会在莫扎特的小提琴协奏曲中结束。
v.(努力)取得, (设法)获得( procure的过去式和过去分词 );拉皮条
  • These cars are to be procured through open tender. 这些汽车要用公开招标的办法购买。 来自《现代汉英综合大词典》
  • A friend procured a position in the bank for my big brother. 一位朋友为我哥哥谋得了一个银行的职位。 来自《用法词典》
adj.[医]散开的;点缀的v.intersperse的过去式和过去分词
  • Lectures will be interspersed with practical demonstrations. 讲课中将不时插入实际示范。
  • The grass was interspersed with beds of flowers. 草地上点缀着许多花坛。 来自《现代英汉综合大词典》
adj.极好的;极为巨大的;寓言中的,传说中的
  • We had a fabulous time at the party.我们在晚会上玩得很痛快。
  • This is a fabulous sum of money.这是一笔巨款。
n.大炮,火炮;飞机上的机关炮
  • The soldiers fired the cannon.士兵们开炮。
  • The cannon thundered in the hills.大炮在山间轰鸣。
好奇,求知欲
  • It especially excited their inquisitiveness. 这尤其引起了他们的好奇心。
  • This attitude combines a lack of class consciousness, a somewhat jaunty optimism and an inquisitiveness. 这种态度包括等级观念不强,得意洋洋的乐观劲儿和刨根问底的好奇心。
n.孤儿院
  • They dispensed new clothes to the children in the orphanage.他们把新衣服发给孤儿院的小孩们。
  • They gave the proceeds of the sale to the orphanage.他们把销售的收入给了这家孤儿院。
n.惊险片,恐怖片
  • He began by writing a thriller.That book sold a million copies.他是写惊险小说起家的。那本书卖了一百万册。
  • I always take a thriller to read on the train.我乘火车时,总带一本惊险小说看。
n.慷慨的赠予物,奖金;慷慨,大方;施与
  • He is famous for his bounty to the poor.他因对穷人慷慨相助而出名。
  • We received a bounty from the government.我们收到政府给予的一笔补助金。
adv.带有成见地(stereotype的副词形式)
vt.掠夺,蹂躏,使苦恼
  • Today,people feel more hurried and harried.今天,人们感到更加忙碌和苦恼。
  • Obama harried business by Healthcare Reform plan.奥巴马用医改掠夺了商界。
n.隐喻,暗喻
  • Using metaphor,we say that computers have senses and a memory.打个比方,我们可以说计算机有感觉和记忆力。
  • In poetry the rose is often a metaphor for love.玫瑰在诗中通常作为爱的象征。
学英语单词
A.S.W.
absolute permittivity of vacuum
ACAU
account as recorded in a ledger
age-blackened
aggrandise
alumina fibers
alumina minium
analytical model
andis
Antidorcas
balanced reaction rudder
bare one's teeth
belted plaid
biographette
blizzak
bottle-top
businesswoman
car registration
caryomitome
cat walk bridge
catarrhal
cement conveyer
circulatory shock pathology
cold starting ability
conspicuities
converted encoded information type
covelli
cross-index
decompositions
degree of maturation
deused
diethoxy-Q2
digitalate pulse
divergent current
durg fast
duriss
electronic-goods
elephant dugout
end shift frame
eptatretus
equimultiple
f?ng kuan
fare cards
fascism
free-air dose
fuck with him
gabra
gantry crane with electric hoist
giganti
gunnhild
half rear axle
heat equivalent of mechanical work
heat-sensitive sensor
helenvales
hermaphroditic contact
Hoffmann's sign
housing discrimination
hydroglyphus amamiensis
hymen-
ion orbit
janizar
johnny to
lionization
loading warranties
luciferids
MCV
medical department
MHC restriction
money mule
niftic
nonstate economy
notional word
opening moves
oscilloscope display test
partial variation
partly-paid stock
pentimenti
Photinia loriformis
power export
programmable text-editor
protomerite
Pseudorhipsalis
puree
reflagging
relative coefficient value
revenue kilometres
richtuis
royal touch
sale force
scanner program
ship service
shipping memo
somatocysts
stoneflies
Strychnos gaultheriana
taken out on
tetraphylla
Thesiger B.
Verkhneural'sk
vernacle
zero-deflection method