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阅读理解-阅读单选(约500词) | 较易(0.85) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要说明了人们经常抱怨没有时间阅读,而让这个问题更加棘手的是,通常的时间管理技巧似乎并不足够。因为深度阅读不仅需要时间,而且需要一种特殊的时间,而这种时间不能仅仅通过提高效率来获得。文章还介绍了如何实现沉浸式阅读的方法。

1 . That everyone’s too busy these days is a cliche. But one specific complaint is made frequently: There’s never any time to read. A professional reader, the novelist and critic Tim Parks, wrote in a New York Review of Books essay: “Every moment of serious reading has to be fought for, planned for.” Parks wrote that in June; last month, I finally found time to read it.

What makes the problem thornier is that the usual time-management techniques don’t seem sufficient. The web’s full of articles offering tips on making time to read: “Give up TV” or “Carry a book with you at all times”. But in my experience, using such methods to free up the odd 30 minutes doesn’t work. Sit down to read and the flywheel of work-related thoughts keeps spinning — or else you’re so exhausted that a challenging book’s the last thing you need. “The modern mind,” Parks writes, “is overwhelmingly inclined toward communication ... It is not simply that one is interrupted; it is that one is actually inclined to interruption.” Deep reading requires not just time, but a special kind of time which can’t be obtained merely by becoming more efficient.

In fact, “becoming more efficient” is part of the problem. Thinking of time as a resource to be maximized means you approach it instrumentally, judging any given moment as well spent only in so far as it advances progress toward some goal. Immersive reading, by contrast, depends on being willing to risk inefficiency, goallessness, even time-wasting. Try to slot it as a to-do list item and you’ll manage only goal-focused reading — useful, sometimes, but not the most fulfilling kind. “The future comes at us like empty bottles along an unstoppable and nearly infinite convey or belt,” writes Gary Eberle in his book Sacred Time, and “we feel a pressure to fill these different-sized bottles (days, hours, minutes) as they pass, for if they get by without being filled, we will have wasted them”. No mind-set could be worse for losing yourself in a book.

So what does work? Perhaps surprisingly, scheduling regular times for reading. You’d think this might fuel the efficiency mind-set, but in fact, Eberle notes, such ritualistic behaviour helps us “step outside time’s flow” into “soul time”. You could limit distractions by reading only physical books, or on single-purpose e-readers. “Carry a book with you at all times” can actually work, too-providing you dip in often enough, so that reading becomes the default state from which you temporarily surface to take care of business, before dropping back down. On a really good day, it no longer feels as if you’re “making time to read,” but just reading, and making time for everything else.

1. The usual time-management techniques don’t work because _________.
A.what they can offer does not ease the modern mind
B.what challenging books demand it repetitive reading
C.what people often forget is carrying a book with them
D.what deep reading requires cannot be guaranteed
2. The “empty bottles” metaphor illustrates that people feel a pressure to _________.
A.update their to-do listsB.make passing time fulfilling
C.carry their plans throughD.pursue carefree reading
3. Eberle would agree that scheduling regular times for reading helps __________.
A.encourage the efficiency mind-setB.develop online reading habits
C.promote ritualistic readingD.achieve immersive reading
4. “Carry a book with you at all times” can work if _________.
A.reading becomes your primary business of the day
B.all the daily business has been promptly dealt with
C.you are able to drop back to business after reading
D.time can be evenly split for reading and business
2022-10-28更新 | 164次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市复旦大学附属中学2022-2023学年高三上学期第一次教学质量检测英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约550词) | 较难(0.4) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。主要告诉人们在读书时应该回归细读。

2 . The Best Way to Enjoy a Book

I am no slow eater. I can’t remember the number of times I was told as a child not to gobble my food. Nor have I been a slow reader. I went through books like combine harvesters through crops in the English village of my childhood.

Perhaps I will continue to gobble my food until my last meal on this planet. But books! They are an entirely different matter. Having been prevented from visiting bookstores and libraries during these days of isolation. I have decided to make changes. After all, didn’t someone once say, “It’s an ill wind that blows nobody any good.”

I imagine slow reading to be like slow cooking: a variety of ingredients mixed into something one can truly enjoy. Slow reading means enjoying each sentence, absorbing all of those paragraphs of description that had probably been sweated over by the author and, more often than not, skipped over by readers like me.

This isn’t to say I pay only random attention to a book. Before deciding on one to buy or borrow, I always read the synopsis and the “About the Author” section. I would also read the dedication, the foreword and the author’s acknowledgments. Only then do I move on to the book’s opening sentence. This is essentially how I had selected the two books that I most recently finished.

In order to truly enjoy these two novels, I rationed my reading to two hours a day-no more and no less. A funny thing happens when you take two hours out of the day - every day – for something you really, really enjoy. I experienced a quiet sense of accomplishment that I had missed for years.

English writer Kate Atkinson’s Transcription has been advertised as “a novel of rare depth from one of the best writers of our time.” Award-winning Newfoundler Michael Crummey’s The Innocents, meanwhile, is said to be “a richly imagined and fascinating story of hardship and survival.” I am glad I didn’t read Transcription at my usual pace. I suspect I would have missed much of the brilliance of the writing. Instead, I made myself completely involved in the life of 18-year-old Julie. I often paused at the end of a chapter to reread it for the joy of laughing aloud at the heroine’ observations.

The Innocents is about the life of two orphans in an isolated bay in Newfoundland. It was hard not to run through this powerful narrative—but I resisted the temptation. My patience was rewarded with a deeper understanding of the character and rich description of northern Newfoundland— so real that I could almost feel the lichen (地衣) between my toes.

So here I am, two books finished that took me a month to read. I have been entertained, enriched and transported in time and place like I never have before. Having discovered the joys of taking my time over a book now, I doubt I will ever again announce proudly, “It only took me a day or a couple of hours to finish!”

1. According to the article, the author used to ______.
A.read novels while gobbling her food.
B.spend no more than two hours reading every day.
C.consider it a waste of time to read fictional stories.
D.finish reading a book in a day or even a couple of hours.
2. The underlined proverb “It’s an ill wind that blows nobody any good,” probably means ______.
A.even the craziest ideas can become popular.
B.even the most popular ideas can go out of fashion.
C.even the most positive situations can harm someone.
D.even the most negative situations can benefit someone.
3. The author compared reading to cooking in order to illustrate that ______.
A.it is fun to read book related to food.
B.it is rewarding to pick up various types of books.
C.it is worthwhile to appreciate the brilliance of every sentence.
D.It is important to read the synopsis before deciding on a book to read.
4. While reading The Innocents, the author ______.
A.imagined herself to be an orphan.
B.ended up with a deep appreciation of the story.
C.read through the descriptive part of the book quickly.
D.thought about the relationship between hardship and survival.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约340词) | 较难(0.4) |
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文章大意:这是一篇议论文。文章介绍了作者在阅读中进行的批判性阅读以及其他的想法。

3 . Criticism is judgment. A critic is a judge. A judge must study and think about the material presented to him, accept it, correct it or reject it after thinking over what he has read, watched or heard.

Another word for criticism is appreciation. When I criticize or appreciate some object or another, I look for its good points and bad points. In reading any printed or written matter, I always have a pencil in hand and put any comments in the book or on a separate paper. In other words, I always talk back to the writer.

That sort of critical reading might well be called creative reading because I am thinking along with the author, asking him questions, seeing whether he answers the questions and how well he answers them. I mark the good passages to store them in my memory and ask myself about every other part and about the complete piece of writing; where, how and why could or should I improve upon it?

You might think that doing what I suggested is work. Yes, it is, but the work is a pleasure because I can feel my brain expanding, my emotion reacting and my way of living change.

Reading exercises is a great influence on a person. If pictures, still or moving, accompany the reading, the memory will retain the material for a long time.

Just as evil books can corrupt, so also can good books gradually work a change on a corrupt person.

Let's get back to the beneficial effects of thinking while reading. It helps us to enlarge our minds. We understand more about the universe, its people and many of its wonders. We learn to think and observe in new ways. We certainly do get a feeling for the language we are reading. All good writers in any language have been readers who read critically and continuously.

1. According to the writer, creative reading is ________.
A.raising questions and answering them for the author
B.reading and giving comments on the materials one has read
C.thinking in the same line with the author
D.storing up facts in one's memory
2. The writer says a critic ________.
A.asks what he does not understand
B.talks back to the author
C.understand the background on which the works are based
D.looks for the good and bad points of the material he has read
3. By the phrase “thinking along with” in the third paragraph, the writer means________.
A.following one's thought closelyB.accepting
C.consideringD.agreeing
4. We can learn from the passage that all good readers ________.
A.understand more about their surrounding than others.
B.have a thorough insight to the problem in life.
C.have the feeling of the language they read.
D.have read extensively(广泛地) and critically
阅读理解-阅读单选(约310词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇应用文。介绍了亚马逊正在展示的今年的特价商品——四部书。
4 .

Amazon is presenting to you our bargains for the year!

In Steve Jobs, based on more than forty interviews with Jobs conducted over two years—as well as interviews with more than a hundred family members, friends, competitors, and colleagues—Walter Isaacson has pictured an appealing up -and-down life and strong personality of a creative man whose passion for perfection revolutionized six industries: personal computers, animated movies, music, phones, tablet computing, and digital publishing.

Hillary Rodham Clinton is known to hundreds of millions of people around the world. Yet few beyond her close friends and family have ever heard her account of her extraordinary journey. She writes with humor and passion about her upbringing in suburban and her transformation from Goldwater Girl to controversial First Lady.

In the highly anticipated Thinking. Fast and Slow, Kahneman takes us on a groundbreaking tour of the mind and explains the two systems that drive the way we think. System 1 is fast, and emotional; System 2 is slower, and more logical. In the book. Kahneman also shows the extraordinary abilities—and the faults and errors—of thinking, and reveals the influence of personal impressions on our thoughts and behavior.

Grey Heffley is in big trouble. School property has been damaged, and Grey is the main suspect. But the crazy thing is, he has done nothing wrong. The authorities are closing in, but when a surprise storm hits, the Heffley family is trapped indoors. Greg knows that when they snow melts he's going to have to face the music, but could any punishment be worse than being stuck inside with your family for the holiday?

1. About the book Steve Jobs, which for the following statements is NOT TRUE?
A.The main contents of the book are mainly based on various interviews.
B.The book is written by Steve Jobs.
C.Steve Jobs has experienced both successful and difficult periods in his lifetime.
D.Steve Jobs has totally changed six different industries.
2. What is the book Thinking, Fast and Slow mainly about?
A.Two thinking types and thinking-related facts.
B.Difference between two thinking systems.
C.How to think fast and logically at the same time.
D.The great power of personal impression on thinking system.
3. The underlined phrase "facing the music" means ________.
A.attend a concert
B.take-a music examination
C.go back to school
D.face-up to difficulties
4. From the introduction of the Book Diary of a Wimpy Kid, it is implied that ________.
A.Greg was caught damaging the school property
B.Greg knew who really damaged the school property
C.Greg had a poor relationship with his family
D.it was hot during the holiday
2022-08-11更新 | 69次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市建平中学2020-2021学年高一上学期分班考英语试题
阅读理解-六选四(约350词) | 困难(0.15) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章介绍了作者在读《尤利西斯》时遇到问题并分析原因。

5 . The Hardest Novel I’ve Ever Read

For the last three months, I have glared at its fat heavy form on my floor with a vague sense of personal failure. I have opened Ulysses twice, determined to finish it, and managed to get all the way to page 46. I have read so little both times that I have never bothered using a bookmark.

    1     I like the community this book has created, its inherent sense of freedom and celebration of all things rude and true. I like that the style and language allow for readers to choose how they read it — some recommend skipping chapter three, others suggest reading it only after reading ABOUT it but I still get stuck.

Why do I get stuck?     2     On the “Most Difficult Novels” list on the Goodreads website, Joyce takes the top two spots, with Ulysses ranking first and Finnegans Wake following it. I think what is restricting me to page 46 is the language: the big fat burst of Chaucerian English with slang and jaunty dialogue that, while entertaining me, is also leaving me a little lost.

There are a few other “worthy” works of literature I have yet to read, including Infinite Jest and War and Peace.     3     I really want to love Ulysses. I feel deeply frustrated that I can’t finish it, all the while appreciating its uniqueness, weightiness and special “Joyceness.”

The English writer Virginia Woolf thought Ulysses was nonsense as she complained in her diaries about the pressure to finish reading it. By contrast, Vladimir Nabokov, the author who wrote Lolita expressed deep love for it.     4     I have read it similar to a long marriage(something unpleasant, big reward at the end), modern Jazz-fusion (an innovative genre) and boxing match with oneself (wanting to punch yourself in the face), which is how I felt by page 46.

Some people love Ulysses, so where am I getting wrong? My ultimate hope is that the struggle will be worth the effort and I can proceed victorious onto page 800 or so, on my third fourth, eighteenth try. Something tells me I will get there in the end.

A.I’m not entirely sure myself
B.A lot of them are weighty tomes (巨著), but I like big books
C.It seems that reading Ulysses is a big different experience for everyone.
D.Even when staring at pages without absorbing a word, I thought nice thoughts about it
E.They, however, only cause me a slight sense of shame that I have not read or enjoyed them
F.I have been amused and charmed by the first two or three chapters, and then puzzled and bored.
2022-07-05更新 | 368次组卷 | 3卷引用:上海市曹杨第二中学2021-2022学年高二下学期总结性评价(期末)英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约290词) | 较易(0.85) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了世界读书日旨在鼓励各个年龄段的人,特别是青少年享受阅读的乐趣。

6 . World Book Day was created by UNESCO on 23rd April 1995 as a worldwide celebration of books and reading. It is marked in over 100 countries around the globe. In an effort to move celebrations of reading into the evening and focus more on adults instead of children, World Book Night starts in the UK in 2011.

At The Reading Agency, we want to create a world where everyone is reading their way to a better life. Research shows that reading for pleasure can promote better health and wellbeing, aids in building social connections and relationships with others and is associated with a range of factors that help increase the chances of social mobility.

World Book Night is about encouraging more people to become readers. By participating on 23 April, whether on your own or with others, you’ll be playing a part in contributing to our mission of coping with life’s big challenges through the proven power of reading.

What are the benefits of reading for pleasure?

19% of readers say that reading stops them from feeling lonely.

Higher literacy skills are associated with a range of positive societal benefits, including having a stronger sense of belonging to society and being more likely to trust others.

Studies have found that reading for pleasure enhances empathy (共情), understanding of the self, and the ability to understand one’s own and others’ identities.

Regular readers for pleasure reported fewer feelings of stress and depression than non-readers, and stronger feelings of relaxation from reading than from watching television or engaging with technology intensive activities.

1. What is the purpose of the “World Book Night”?
A.To deal with challenges in life.
B.To introduce the power of reading.
C.To encourage more adults to become readers.
D.To promote people’s physical and mental health.
2. Where can you find the passage above?
A.In a newspaper.B.In a magazine.C.In a website.D.On TV.
3. If you want to participate in the reading activity with your friends on April 23, you can most probably refer to ________ section first.
A.BOOKSB.IMPACTC.RESOURCESD.GET INVOLVED
2022-06-23更新 | 69次组卷 | 1卷引用:2022届上海市金山区高考二模英语试题(含听力)
阅读理解-阅读单选(约370词) | 较易(0.85) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。主要介绍《公主的康复:如何培养坚强、有能力的女孩》这本关于孩子教育的书籍。

7 . Given that most little girls love to dress up as princesses, it is difficult to imagine what might be wrong with that. But one author has written an entire book on how she believes the fairy tale fantasies send a dangerous message.

Jennifer L Hardstein is behind the recently-published Princess Recovery: A How-To Guide to Raising Strong, Empowered Girls Who Can Create Their Own Happily Ever Afters. The child and adolescent psychologist believes that children as young as two are taking away unrealistic ideals from fairy tale books and Disney cartoons that can affect their self-esteem later on.

In her book, Dr. Hardstein theories that traditional stories like Sleeping Beauty and Cinderella promote the idea that if a girl is pretty enough and has fancy clothes and shoes, she find love and popularity. The author refers to this phenomenon as the “Princess Syndrome”

These kinds of messages, she says, have a huge impact on a girl's self-confidence and make it hard for children to understand as they grow up, that intelligence, generosity and passion are more important value. During an appearance on CBS' Early Show, Dr. Hardstein explained: “Girls are getting this message everywhere that. … what their worth is based on is how they look and the things that they have and it's very superficial (肤浅的)”

Her book teaches parents how to let their toddlers (幼儿) enjoy the Disney moves and their teenagers watch figures in reality shows while encouraging a discussion about the messages projected by the media. Speaking on the show she said: “Parents think their kids will understand the messages that they receive all the time but actually they don't.”

As well as warning of the dangers of “Princess Syndrome” her book advise parents how to guide and empower their children from an early age. Dr. Hardstein warns of the influence of toys like Barbie dolls and teenager celebrities who might wear heavy make-up.

Princess Recovery, she assure parents, will bring “balance, confidence, and self-sufficiency into your daughter's life while giving her a modern, energetic childhood.”

1. According to Jennifer L Hardstein, the fairy tale fantasies _______
A.are dangerous because girls in them greys up like princesses
B.are difficult to understand due to people's wrong imagination
C.enable girls to be strong and empowered like princesses
D.contain unrealistic ideals affecting young kids' self-esteem later
2. Dr. Hardstein believes that _______
A.Sleeping Beauty and Cinderella should be abandoned totally
B.girls find love and popularity with beauty and fancy clothes
C.intelligence, generosity and passion are more important value
D.it is superficial to look pretty and have fancy clothes and shoes
3. What tip can parents get from her book to deal with the “Princess Syndrome”?
A.Disney movie's and reality shows should be completely forbidden.
B.Discussions help kids understand messages projected by the media.
C.Young children should ' play with toys such as Barbie dolls.
D.Heavy make-up is harmful for the health of teenager celebrities.
4. The passage is written in order to ______
A.introduce a new term called the “Princess Syndrome”B.guide parents how to deal with the fairy tale fantasies
C.introduce and advertise a new book on child raisingD.warning of the dangers of the “Princess Syndrome”
2022-06-17更新 | 249次组卷 | 3卷引用:上海市上海中学2021-2022学年高三下学期期中考试英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约420词) | 较难(0.4) |
名校
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了纽约的人们有在地铁上阅读的习惯,介绍了地铁上阅读的人群和场景。

8 . The middle-aged woman with the black sweater around her shoulders had assumed an accurately adjusted posture: feet shoulder-width apart, arms slightly bent, fists loosely tightened, muscles relaxed yet alert.

She was not preparing for a tae kwon do match, but performing her personal version of the underground battle engaged in daily by millions of New Yorkers: reading, attentively, on a sardine-can D train heading swiftly toward Brooklyn in the evening rush.

“I am a New Yorker,” the woman, Robin Kornhaber, 54, told me as if those five crisp words explained everything. “I can do anything on the subway.”

Reading on the subway is a New York custom, for the masters of the intricately (错综复杂地) folded newspaper like Ms. Kornhaber, who lives in Park Slope and works on the Upper East Side, as well as for teenage girls thumbing through magazines, aspiring actors memorizing lines and immigrants taking comfort in paragraphs in a familiar tongue. These days, among the worn covers may be the occasional Kindle, but since most trains are still devoid of Internet access, the subway ride remains a rare low-tech interlude (插曲) in a city of multitasking workaholics. And so, we read.

Even without a seat, even while pressed with strangers into human panini, even as someone plays a keyboard harmonica and makes a loud noise with a cup of change, even when stumbling home after a party.

There are those whose commutes are carefully timed to the length of a Talk of the Town section of The New Yorker, those who systematically page their way through the classics, and those who always carry a second novel in case they unexpectedly make it to the end of the first on a slow F train. There is a lawyer from Brooklyn who for the past two months has catalogued what she and other commuters are reading on a blog, “The Subway Book Club,” and a student at the New School who spent the summer passing out 600 donated books to subway riders to spread her passion for reading.

And then there are those reading the readers, imagining their story lines. That man in a suit studying “Rosetta Stone Level 3 Italian” on the No.2 train must be preparing to meet his fiancée’s family in Tuscany. The woman reading a young-adult novel at 81st Street is probably a teacher preparing for class.

1. Which of the following is the best title of the passage?
A.New York RushB.Reading Underground
C.Underground BattleD.Subway Escape
2. The first three paragraphs tell us that ________.
A.Robin Kornhaber is a little bit nervous on the train
B.Robin Kornhaber is physically prepared for train ride
C.Robin Kornhaber is a typical New York train rider and reader
D.Robin Kornhaber stands for New Yorkers who rely heavily on subway
3. Which of the following is NOT true?
A.It is a culture for New Yorkers to read underground.
B.Some people will make guesses at those reading on the train.
C.People have no Internet access on most underground trains in New York.
D.People must make a careful schedule if they are to read underground.
4. The following may stand for the ill environment for readers on the train EXCEPT ________.
A.sardine-can D trainB.human panini
C.tae kwon do matchD.keyboard harmonica
2022-05-17更新 | 131次组卷 | 4卷引用:上海市大同中学2021-2022学年高三下学期3月月考英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约490词) | 适中(0.65) |
名校
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了科技对传统阅读既是机遇也是挑战。

9 . We have a crisis on our hands. You mean global warming? The world economy? No, the decline of reading. People are just not doing it anymore, especially the young. Who’s responsible? Actually, it’s more like, what is responsible? The Internet, of course, and everything that comes with it — Facebook, Twitter. You can write your own list.

There’s been a warning about the immediate death of literate civilization for a long time. In the 20th century, first it was the movies, then radio, then television that seemed to spell doom for the written world. None did. Reading survived; in fact it not only survived, it has developed quickly. The world is more literate than ever before — there are more and more readers, and more and more books.

The fact that we often get our reading material online today is not something we should worry over. The electronic and digital revolution of the last two decades has arguably shown the way forward for reading and for writing. Take the arrival of e-book readers as an example. Devices like Kindle make reading more convenient and are a lot more environmentally friendly than the traditional paper book.

As technology makes new ways of writing possible, new ways of reading are possible. Inter-connectivity allows for the possibility of a reading experience that was barely imaginable before. Where traditional books had to make do with photographs and illustrations, an e-book can provide readers with an unlimited number of links: to texts, pictures and videos. In the future, the way people write novels, history and philosophy will resemble nothing seen in the past.

On the other hand, there is the danger of trivialization. One Twitter group is offering its followers single-sentence-long “digest” of the great novels. War and Peace in a sentence? You must be joking. We should fear the fragmentation (碎片化) of reading. There is the danger that the high-speed connectivity of the Internet will reduce our attention span — that we will be incapable of reading anything of length or which requires deep concentration.

In such a fast-changing world, in which reality seems to be remade each day, we need the ability to focus and understand what is happening to us. This has always been the function of literature and we should be careful not to let it disappear. Our society needs to be able to imagine the possibility of someone utterly in tune with modern technology but able to make sense of a dynamic, confusing world.

In the 15th century, Johannes Guttenberg’s invention of the printing press in Europe had a huge impact on civilization. Once upon a time the physical book was a challenging thing. We should remember this before we assume that technology is out to destroy traditional culture.

1. The following are all cited as advantages of e-books EXCEPT _________.
A.multiform contentB.environmental friendliness
C.convenience for readersD.imaginative design
2. The underlined word “trivialization” in the fifth paragraph is closest in meaning to “______”.
A.making things unimportant and less seriousB.reducing people’s attention span
C.making things funny like a jokeD.offering “single-sentence-long” novels
3. What can be inferred from the passage?
A.We are facing the problem of declining of reading due to the fast development of the Internet.
B.The single-sentence-long “digests” can help us read the great novels with ease.
C.People need the knowledge of modern technology in order to survive in the fast-changing society.
D.The author is concerned about the negative effect of technology on traditional culture.
4. What is the main idea of the passage?
A.Technology pushes the way forward for reading and writing.
B.Inter-connectivity is a feature of the new reading experience.
C.Technology is an opportunity and a challenge for traditional reading.
D.Technology offers a greater variety of the reading experience.
2022-05-16更新 | 139次组卷 | 2卷引用:上海复旦大学附属中学2021-2022学年高一下学期期中考试英语线上试卷
阅读理解-阅读单选(约460词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。介绍了适合年轻人阅读的几本读物。

10 . The books we read when we’re young have a special sort of power: they can inspire us to be brave and resilient (Matilda by Roald Dahi), take us on thrilling adventures (Divergent by Veronica Roth) and even introduce us to tragedy (The Bridge to Terabithia by Katherine Paterson). They’re as formative as anything else in our young lives, and sometimes they’re the first place we encounter larger-than-life ideas. Consider the lasting cultural import of To Kill a Mockingbird or even the urgency of a newer best seller like I’ll Give You the Sun, Jandy Nelson’s 2014 novel centering on a contradictory issue. In The Magic Words, Cheryl B. Klein, an executive editor at Scholastic whose projects include the last two Harry Potter books, sets out to inform would-be writers on how great novels for young readers work.

The market for YA novels is booming: sales in the children’s and YA sector have been neck and neck with those of adult books in recent years, and adult authors, including Meg Wolitzer (Belzhar) and Carl Hiaasen (Razor Girl), are getting in on the phenomenon. Magic Words aims to be a master class. If you think it sounds silly, it isn’t. In the era of elevated self-help sensations like Marie Kondo and Breníé Brown, The Magic Words is of a piece.

Klein deconstructs the seemingly obvious clear plotlines, sympathetic characters to reveal the technical intricacies of some beloved classics. L. M. Montgomery surely didn’t whip up Anne of Green Gables as a cash-in endeavor. But for those who want to capitalize, Anne is instructive: what’s timeless and broadly appealing about Anne - her teenage heart and impulses——is what to examine. Once you understand that. Klein encourages you to get personal: What makes you ideal to write your story? And what does it mean to the reader?

On the latter question, The Magic Words is more than a handbook. It is also a timely social commentary on the responsibility YA writers have to young adults. Those who write to a younger demographic must start with an awareness of their readers——not only their age but also how they might connect with the issues, both the mundane bullies and the cultural tolerance that characters face. The narratives we tell young readers can influence how they understand and value the world around them. The magic isn’t in the words: it’s in how the words come together to reflect and affirm the realities of a diverse young-adult experience.

1. According to the first paragraph, it can be learned that ________.
A.The Bridge to Terabithia can inspire us to be brave and resilient
B.Matilda by Roald Dahi can take us on thrilling adventures
C.Divergent by Veronica Roth even introduce us to tragedy
D.To Kill a Mockingbird has lasting cultural significance
2. Which of the following is NOT true about YA novels?
A.Anne is a master in the field YA novels.
B.Sales in the children’s and YA sector have been neck and neck.
C.Adult authors are getting in the field of YA novels.
D.The market for YA novels is booming.
3. According to the text, the Magic Words is ________.
A.full of absurd plots and complex narrative structure
B.one of the masterpieces of Klein
C.not only a handbook but also a timely social commentary
D.a novel composed of many letters
4. According to the last paragraph, those writers who write to a younger should ________.
A.find someone to sponsor their writingB.fully understand their readership first
C.develop a strategy to meet the marketD.copy the works of historical masters
2022-04-26更新 | 80次组卷 | 2卷引用:上海市南洋模范中学2021-2022学年高二下学期线上学情调研(二)英语试题
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