第一篇:牛津书虫系列
牛津书虫系列
第一级:300生词量,适合小学、初一学生,共8本。
1、《爱情与金钱》Love or Money? by Romena Akinyemi2、《苏格兰玛丽女王》Mary Queen of Scots by Tim Vicary3、《在月亮下面》Under the Moon by Romena Akinyemi4、《潘德尔的巫师》The Witches of Pendle by Rowena Akinyemi5、《歌剧院的幽灵》The Phantom of the Opera by Jennifer Bassett6、《猴爪》The Monkey's Paw by W.W.Jacobs7、《象人》The Elephant Man by Tim Vicary8、《世界上最冷的地方》The Coldest Place On Earth by Tim Vicary 第二级:600生词量,适合初一学生,8本
1、《威廉.莎士比亚》 William Shakespeare by Jannifer Bassett2、《一个国王的爱情故事》 The Love of a King by Peter Dainty3、《亡灵岛》Dead Man's Island by John Escott4、《哈克贝利•费恩历险记》The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain5、《鲁宾孙漂流记》 Robinson Cruso by Daniel Defoe6、《爱丽丝漫游奇境记》Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll7、《格林•盖布尔斯来的安妮》Anne of Green Gables by LM Montgomery8、《五个孩子和沙精》Five Children and It by Edith Nesbit
第二篇:牛津英语书虫系列
牛津英语书虫系列
The Witches of Pendle 藩德尔的巫师
Huckleberry Finn 哈克贝利·费恩历险记
Washington Square 华盛顿广场
Agatha Christie 神秘女人 阿加莎.克里斯蒂
A Little Princess 小公主
Jane Eyre 简·爱
Cranford 克兰福德
The Railway Children 铁路少年
William Shakespeare 威廉·莎士比亚
Black Beauty 黑骏马
Desert Mountain Sea 极限之旅
Dead Man's Island 亡灵岛
Dracula 德拉库拉
Ear-Rings from Frankfurt 法兰克福的耳环
Far from the Madding Crowd 远离尘嚣
Kidnapped 诱拐
Frankenstein 弗兰肯斯坦
Survive!生存游戏
Justice 公正
The Elephant Man 象人
Skyjack 劫机
Dr JEKYLL and Mr Hyde 化身博士
The Prisoner of Zinda 曾达的囚徒
King Arthur 亚瑟王
Little Women 小妇人
Love or Money 爱情与金钱
The Hound of The Baskervilles 巴斯克维尔猎犬
Pride and Prejudice 傲慢与偏见
Tales of Mystery and Imagination 神秘及幻想故事集
Mystery in London 雾都疑案
Five Children and It 五个孩子和沙精
Oliver Twist 雾都孤儿
Remember Miranda 难忘米兰达
Robin Hood 侠盗罗宾汉
Robinson Crusoe 鲁宾孙漂流记
Goodbye Mr Hollywood 别了,好莱坞先生
Silas Marner 织工马南
Sherlock Holmes and The Sport of Kings 福尔摩斯与赛马
Stories From The Five Towns 五镇故事
Great Expectations 远大的前程
The Thirty-nine Steps 三十九级台阶
The Coldest Place on Earth 世界上最冷的地方
The Jungle Book 森林王子
The Monkey's Paw 猴爪
The Omega Files 奥米茄文件
The Unquiet Grave 不平静的坟墓
The President's Murderer 谁谋杀了总统
Sherlock Holmes and The Duke's Son 舍洛克福尔摩斯和公爵的儿子
The Ransom of Red Chief 红酋长的赎金
The Scarlet Letter 红字
The Secret Garden 秘密花园
The Star Zoo 星际动物园
The Three Strangers and Other Stories 三个陌生人
The White Stones 白色巨石
The Wind in the Willows 风语河岸柳
The Wizard of Oz 绿野仙踪
Henry VIII and His Six Wives 亨利八世和他的六个妻子
Tooth and Claw 牙齿和爪子
Treasure Island 金银岛
Under The Moon 在月亮下面
Vampire Killer 吸血鬼猎手
White Death 白色死亡
Wuthering Heights 呼啸山庄
A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court 亚瑟王朝里的美国人
The Phantom of The Opera 歌剧院的幽灵
David Copperfield 大卫.科波菲尔
Give Us the Money 把钱拿出来
Gulliver' Travels 格列佛游记
Mutiny On The Bounty 邦蒂号暴动
The Canterville Ghost 坎特维尔幽灵
Anne and Green Gables 格林·盖布尔斯来的安妮
The Woman in White 白衣女人
A Christmas Carol 圣诞欢歌
Chemical Secret 化学秘密
The Piciure of Dorian Gray 多里安·格雷的画像
The Murders in the Rue Margue 莫尔格街凶杀案
Orca 逆戟鲸
Tess 苔丝
The Bionte Story 勃朗特一家的故事
The Love of A King 一个国王的爱情故事
The Call of The Wild 野性的呼唤
Mary Queen of Scots 苏格兰玛丽女王
Three Men in A Boat 三怪客泛舟记
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland 爱丽丝漫游奇境记
Aladdin and the Enchanted Lamp 阿拉丁和神灯
Through The Looking-Glass 爱丽丝镜中世界奇遇记 A Tale of Two Cities 双城记
第三篇:牛津书虫系列-野性的呼唤-英文版
To the north
Buck did not read the newspapers. He did not know that trouble was coming for every big dog in California. Men had found gold in the Yukon,and these men wanted big,strong dogs to work in the cold and snow of the north.
Buck lived in Mr Miller's big house in the sunny Santa Clara valley There were large gardens and fields of fruit trees around the house,and a river nearby. In a big place like this,of course,there were many dogs There were house dogs and farm dogs,but they were not important.Buck was chief dog;he was born here,and this was his place .He was four years old and weighed sixty kilos .He went swimming with Mr Miller's sons,and walking with his daughters .He carried the grandchildren on his back,and he sat at Mr Miller's feet in front of the fire in winter.
But this was 1897,and Buck did not know that men and dogs were hurrying to north-west Canada to look for gold.And he did not know that Manuel,one of Mr Miller's garden-ers,needed money for his large family. One day,when Mr Miller was out,Manuel and Buck left the garden together.It was just an evening walk,Buck thought.No one saw them go,and only one man saw them arrive at the railway station.This man talked to Manuel,and gave him some money .Then he tied a piece of rope around Buck's neck.
Buck growled,and was surprised when the rope was pulled hard around his neck.He jumped at the man.The man caught him and suddenly Buck was on his back with his tongue out of his mouth. For a few moments he was unable to move,and it was easy for the two men to put him into the train.
When Buck woke up,the train was still moving. The man was sitting and watching him,but Buck was too quick for him and he bit the man's hand hard.Then the rope was pulled again and Buck had to let go.
That evening,the man took Buck to the back room of a bar in San Francisco. The barman looked at the man's hand and trousers covered in blood.
‘How much are they paying you for this?’he asked.
‘I only get fifty dollars.’
‘And the man who stole him—how much did he get?’ asked the barman.
‘A hundred. He wouldn't take less.’
‘That makes a hundred and fifty. It's a good price for a dog like him .Here,help me to get him into this.’
They took off Buck's rope and pushed him into a wooden box. He spent the night in the box in the back room of the bar. His neck still ached with pain from the rope,and he could not understand what it all meant . What did they want with him,these strange men? And where was Mr Miller?
The next day Buck was carried in the box to the railway station and put on a train
to the north.
For two days and nights the train travelled north,and for two days and nights Buck neither ate nor drank. Men on the train laughed at him and pushed sticks at him through the holes in the box. For two days and nights Buck got angrier and hungrier and thirsti-er. His eyes grew red and he bit anything that moved.
In Seattle four men took Buck to a small,high-walled back garden,where a fat man in an old red coat was waiting. Buck was now very angry indeed and hejumped and bit at the sides of his box. The fat man smiled and went to get an axe and a club.
‘Are you going to take him out now?’ asked one of the men. ‘Of course,’ answered the fat man,and he began to break the box with his axe.
Immediately the four other men climbed up onto the wall to watch from a safe place.
As the fat man hit the box with his axe,Buck jumped at the sides,growling and biting,pulling with his teeth at the pieces of broken wood. After a few minutes there was a hole big enough for Buck to get out. ‘ Now,come here,red eyes,’ said the fat man,dropping his axe and taking the club in his right hand.
Buck jumped at the man,sixty kilos of anger,his mouth wide open ready to bite the man's neck. Just before his teeth touched the skin,the man hit him with the club. Buck fell to the ground. It was the first time anyone had hit him with a club and he did not understand. He stood up,and jumped again. Again the club hit him and he crashed to the ground.Ten times he jumped at the man,and ten times the club hit him. Slowly he got to his feet,now only just able to stand.There was blood on his nose and mouth and ears. Then the fat man walked up and hit him again,very hard,on the nose.The pain was terrible. Again,Buck jumped at the man and again he was hit to the ground.A last time he jumped,and this time,when the man knocked him down,Buck did not move.
‘He knows how to teach a dog a lesson,’ said one of the men on the wall. Then the four men jumped down and went back to the station.
‘His name is Buck,’said the fat man to himself,reading the letter that had come with the box.‘Well,Buck,my by,’he said in a friendly voice,‘we've argued a little,and I think the best thing to do now is to stop. Be a good dog and we'll be friends. But if you're a bad dog,I'll have to use my club again.Understand?’
As he spoke,he touched Buck’ s head,and although Buck was angry inside,he did not move. When the man brought him water and meat,Buck drank and then ate the meat,piece by piece,from the man's hand.
Buck was beaten(he knew that)but he was not broken. He had learnt that a man with a club was stronger than him.Every day he saw more dogs arrive,and each dog was beaten by the fat man. Buck understood that a man with a club must be obeyed,although he did not have to be a friend.
Men came to see the fat man and to look at the dogs. Some-times they paid money and left with one or more of the dogs.One day a short,dark man came and looked at Buck.
‘That's a good dog!’ he cried.‘How much do you want for him?’
‘Three hundred dollars. It's a good price,Perrault,’said the fat man.
Perrault smiled and agreed that it was a good price. He knew dogs,and he knew that Buck was an excellent dog.
‘One in ten thousand,’ Perrault said to himself.
Buck saw money put into the fat man’ s hand,and he was not surprised when he and another dog called Curly were taken away by Perrault. He took them to a ship,and later that day Buck and Curly stood and watched the coast get further and further away.They had seen the warm south for the last time.
Perrault took Buck and Curly down to the bottom of the ship. There they met another man,Francois. Perrault was a French-Canadian,but Francois was half-Indian,tall and dark.Buck learnt quickly that Perrault and Francois were fair men,calm and honest. And they knew everything about dogs.
There were two other dogs on the ship.One was a big dog called Spitz,as white as snow. He was friendly to Buck at first,always smiling. He was smiling when he tried to steal Buck’ s food at the first meal. Francois was quick and hit Spitz before Buck had time to move. Buck decided that this was fair,and began to like Francois a little.
Dave,the other dog,was not friendly. He wanted to be alone all the time. He ate and slept and was interested in nothing.
One day was very like another,but Buck noticed that the weather was getting colder. One morning,the ship's engines stopped,and there was a feeling of excitement in the ship.Francois leashed the dogs and took them outside. At the first step Buck's feet went into something soft and white. He jumped back in surprise. The soft,white thing was also falling through the air,and it fell onto him. He tried to smell it,and then caught some on his tongue. It bit like fire,and then dis appeared. He tried again and the same thing happened. People were watching him and laughing,and Buck felt ashamed,although he did not know why. It was his first snow. The law of club and tooth
Buck's first day at Dyea Beach was terrible. Every hour there was some new,frightening surprise. There was no peace,no rest—only continual noise and movement. And every minute there was danger,because these dogs and men were not town dogs and men. They knew only the law of club and tooth.
Buck had never seen dogs fight like these dogs; they were like wolves. In a few minutes he learnt this from watching Curly. She tried to make friends with a dog,a big one,al-though not as big as she was. There was no warning. The dog jumped on Curly,his teeth closed together,then he jumped away,and Curly's face was torn open from eye to mouth. Wolves fight like this,biting and jumping away,but the fight did not finish then. Thirty or forty more dogs ran up and made a circle around the fight,watching silently. Curly tried to attack the dog who had bitten her; he bit her a second time,and jumped away. When she attacked him again,he knocked her backwards,and she fell on the ground. She never stood up again,because this was what the other dogs were waiting for. They moved in,and in a moment she was under a crowd of dogs.
It was all very sudden. Buck saw Spitz run out from the crowd with his tongue out of his mouth,laughing. Then he saw Francois with an axe,and two or three other men with clubs jump in among the dogs. Two minutes later the last of the dogs was chased away. But Curly lay dead in the snow,her body torn almost to pieces.Curly's death often came backto Buck in his dreams. He understood that once a dog was down on the ground,he was dead He also remembered Spitz laughing,and from that moment he hated him.
Then Buck had another surprise. Francois put a harness on him. Buck had seen harnesses on horses,and now he was made to work like a horse,pulling Francois on a sledge into the forest and returning with wood for the fire. Buck worked with Spitz and Dave.The two other dogs had worked in a har-ness before,and Buck learnt by watching them. He also learnt to stop and turn when Francois shouted.
‘Those three are very good dogs,’Francois told Perrault.‘That Buck pulls very well,and he's learning quickly.
Perrault had important letters and official papers to take to Dawson City,so that afternoon he bought two more dogs,two brothers called Billee and Joe.Billee was very friendly,but Joe was the opposite. In the evening Perrault bought one more dog,an old dog with one eye .His name was Sol-leks,which means The Angry One. Like Dave,he made no friends; all he wanted was to be alone.
That night Buck discovered another problem. Where was he going to sleep?Francois and Perrault were in their tent,but when he went in,they shouted angrily and threw things at him.Outside it was very cold and windy. He lay down in the snow,but he was too cold to sleep.
He walked around the tents trying to find the other dogs.But,to his surprise,they had disappeared. He walked around Perrault's tent,very,very cold,wondering what to do. Sud-denly,the snow under his feet fell in,and he felt something move. He jumped back,waiting for the attack,but heard on-ly a friendly bark. There,in a warm hole under the snow,was Billee.
So that was what you had to do. Buck chose a place,dug himself a hole and in a minute he was warm and asleep. He slept well,although his dreams were bad. When he woke up,at first he did not know where he was.It had snowed in the night and the snow now lay thick and heavy above him. Suddenly he was afraid—the fear of a wild animal when it is caught and cannot escape. Growling,he threw himself at the snow,and a moment later,he had jumped upwards into the daylight. He saw the tents and re-membered everything,from the time he had gone for a walk with Manuel to the moment he had dug the hole the night before. ‘What did I say?’ shouted Francois to Perrault,when he saw Buck come up out of the snow.‘That Buck learns quickly.’ Perrault smiled slowly. He was carrying important papers,and he needed good dogs. He was very pleased to have Buck.
They bought three more dogs that morning,and a quarter of an hour later all nine dogs were in harness and on their way up the Dyea Canyon. Buck was not sorry to be moving,and although it was hard work,he almost enjoyed it. He was also surprised to see that Dave and Sol-leks no longer looked bored and miserable.Pulling in a harness was their job,and they were happy to do it.
Dave was sledge-dog,the dog nearest to the sledge.In front of him was Buck,then came Sol-leks. In front of them were the six other dogs,with Spitz as leader at the front. Francois had put Buck between Dave and Sol-leks because they could teach him the work.Buck learnt well,and they were good teachers. When Buck pulled the wrong way,Dave always bit his leg,but only lightly. Once,when they stopped,Buck got tied up in his harness,and it took ten minutes to get started again.Both Dave and Sol-leks gave him a good beating for that mistake. Buck understood,and was more careful after that. It was a hard day's journey,up the Dyea Canyon and into the mountains. They camped that night at Lake Bennett.Here there were thousands of gold miners.They were building boats to sail up the lake when the ice melted in the spring.Buck made his hole in the snow and slept well,but was woken up very early and harnessed to the sledge. The first day they had travelled on snow that had been hardened by many sledges and they covered sixty kilometres. But the next day,and for days afterwards,they were on new snow. The work was harder and they went slowly. Usually,Perrault went in front,on snowshoes,flattening the snow a little for the dogs.Francois stayed by the sledge. Sometimes the two men changed places,but there were many small lakes and rivers,and Perrault understood ice better. He always knew when the ice across a river was very thin.
Day after day Buck pulled in his harness.They started in the morning before it was light,and they stopped in the evening after dark,ate a piece of fish,and went to sleep in their holes under the snow. Buck was always hungry. Francoisgave him 750 grams of dried fish a day,and it was never enough. The other dogs were given only 500 grams; they were smaller and could stay dive on less food.
Buck learnt to eat quickly; if he was too slow,the other dogs stole his food. He saw Pike,one of the new dogs,steal some meat from the sledge when Perrault wasn't looking.The next day Buck stole some and got away unseen. Perrault was very angry,but he thought another dog,Dub,had taken it and so punished him instead of Buck.
Buck was learning how to live in the north. In the south he had never stolen,but there he had never been so hungry. He stole cleverly and secretly,remembering the beatings from the man with the club.
Buck was learning the law of club and tooth.
He learnt to eat any food—anything that he could get his teeth into. He learnt to break the ice on water holes with his feet when he wanted to drink He was stronger,harder,and could see and smell better than ever before .In a way,he was remembering back to the days when wild dogs travelled in packs through the forest,killing for meat as they went.It was easy for him to learn to fight like a wolf,because it was in his blood. In the evenings,when he pointed his nose at the moon and howled long and loud,he was remembering the dogs and wolves that had come before him. The wild animal
The wild animal was strong in Buck,and as he travelled across the snow,it grew stronger and stronger. And as Buck grew stronger,he hated Spitz more and more,although he was careful never to start a fight.
But Spitz was always showing his teeth to Buck,trying to start a fight. And Buck knew that if he and Spitz fought,one of them would die.
The fight almost happened one night when they stopped by Lake Laberge.There was heavy snow and it was very cold.The lake was frozen and Francois,Perrault,and the dogs had to spend the night on the ice,under a big rock. Buck had made a warm hole in the snow and was sorry to leave it to get his piece of fish. But when he had eaten. and returned to his hole,he found Spitz in it. Buck had tried not to fight Spitz be-fore,but this was too much. He attacked him angrily. Spitz was surprised. He knew Buck was big,but he didn’ t know he was so wild. Francois was surprised too,and guessed why Buck was angry. ‘Go on Buck!’ he shouted.‘Fight him,the dirty thief!’
Spitz was also ready to fight,and the two dogs circled one another,looking for the chance to jump in. But suddenly there was a shout from Perrault,and they saw eighty or a hundred dogs around the sledge. The dogs came from an Indian village,and they were searching for the food that they could smell on the sledge. Perrault and Francois tried to fight them off with their clubs,but the dogs,made crazy by the smell of the food,showed their teeth and fought back.
Buck had never seed dogs like these. They were all skin and bone,but hunger made them fight like wild things.Three of them attacked Buck and in seconds his head and legs were bad-ly bitten.Dave and Sol-leks stood side by side,covered in blood,fighting bravely. Joe and Pike jumped on one dog,and Pike broke its neck with one bite.Buck caught another dog by the neck and tasted blood. He threw himself on the next one,and then felt teeth in his own neck.It was Spitz,attacking him from the side.
Perrault and Francois came to help with clubs,but then they had to run back to save the food . It was safer for the nine sledge-dogs to run away across the lake. Several of them were badly hurt,and they spent an unhappy night hiding among the tress.
At first light they returned to the sledge and found Perrault and Francois tired and angry.Half their food was gone.The Indian dogs had even eaten one of Perrault's shoes.Francois looked at his dogs unhappily.
‘Ah,my friends,’he said softly,‘Perhaps those bites will make you ill.What do you think,Perrault?’
Perrault said nothing. They still had six hundred kilometres to travel,and he hoped very much that his sledge-dogs had not caught rabies from the Indian dogs.
The harness was torn and damaged and it was two hours be-fore they were moving,travelling slowly and painfully over the most difficult country that they had been in.
The Thirty Mile River was not frozen. It ran too fast to freeze. They spent six days trying to find a place to cross,and every step was dangerous for dogs and men. Twelve times they found ice bridges across the river,and Perrault walked carefully onto them,holding a long piece of wood. And twelve times he fell through a bridge and was saved by the piece of wood,which caught on the sides of the hole.But the tempera-ture was 45° below zero,and each time Perrault fell into the water,he had to light a fire to dry and warm himself. Once,the sledge fell through the ice,with Dave and Buck,and they were covered in ice by the time Perrault and Francois pulled them out of the river.Again,a fire was needed to save them.Another time,Spitz and the dogs in front fell through the ice—Buck and Dave and Francois at the sledge had to pull backwards.That day they travelled only four hundred metres.
When they got to the Hootalinqua and good ice,Buck and the other dogs were very,very tired. But they were late,so Perrault made them run faster. In three days they went a hun-dred and eighty kilometres and reached the Five Fingers.
The other dogs had hard feet from years of pulling sledges,but Buck's feet were still soft from his easy life down south.All day he ran painfully,and when they camped for the night,he lay down like a dead dog.He was hungry,but he was too tired to walk to the fish,so Francois brought it to him.One day Francois made four little shoes for him,and this made Buck much more comfortable. Francois forgot the shoes one morning,and Buck refused to move. He lay on his back with his feet in the air,until Francois put the shoes on. Later his feet grew harder and the shoes were not needed.
One morning,at the Pelly River,a dog called Delly went suddenly mad. She howled long and loud like a wolf and then jumped at Buck. Buck ran,with Dolly one step behind him.She could not catch him,but he could not escape from her.They ran half a kilometre,and then Buck heard Francois call to him. He turned and ran towards the man,sure that Francois would save him. Francois stood,holding his axe,and as Buck passed,the axe crashed down on Dolly's head.
Buck fell down by the sledge,too tired to move. Immedi-ately,Spitz attacked him and bit his helpless enemy twice,as hard as he could. But Francois saw this,and gave Spitz a ter-rible beating for it.
‘He's a wild dog,that Spitz,’said Perrault.‘One day he'll kill Buck.’
‘Buck is wilder,’replied Francois.‘I've been watching him. One day he'll get very angry and he'll fight Spitz; and he'll win.’ Francois was right. Buck wanted to be lead-dog.Spitz knew this and hated him. Buck started to help the other dogs when Spitz punished them for being lazy.One morning,Pike refused to get up,and Spitz looked for him everywhere. When he found him,he jumped at him.But suddenly,Buck at-tacked Spitz. The other dogs saw this,and it became more and more difficult for Spitz to lead them.But the days passed without a chance for a fight,and soon they were pulling into Dawson City on a cold grey afternoon.
They stayed in Dawson for seven days. When they left,Perrault was carrying some more very important papers,and he wanted to travel back as fast as possible.
They travelled eighty kilometres the first day,and the same the second. But it was difficult work for Francois. Buck and Spitz hated each other,and the other dogs were not afraid of Spitz any more. One night Pike stole half a fish from Spitz,and ate it standing next to Buck. And every time Buck went near Spitz,he growled and the hair on his back stood up angri-ly. The other dogs fought in their harnesses and Francois often had to stop the sledge.He knew that Buck was the problem,but Buck was too clever for him and Francois never saw him actually starting a fight.
One night in camp,the dogs saw a snow rabbit and in a sec-ond they were all chasing it,with Spitz in front. Nearby was another camp,with fifty dogs,who also Joined the chase. The rabbit was running fast on top of the snow,but the snow was soft,and it was more difficult for the dogs. When Spitz caught the rabbit,throwing it in the air with his teeth,Buck was just behind. Spitz stopped,and Buck hit him,very hard. The two dogs fell in the snow. Spitz bit Buck very quickly,twice,and then jumped away,watching carefully.
The time had come,and Buck knew that either he or Spitz must die. They watched one another,circling slowly. Themoon was shining brightly on the snow,and in the cold still air not a leaf moved on the trees. The other dogs finished eating the rabbit and then turned to watch.
Spitz was a good fighter. He was full of hate and anger,but he was also intelligent. Every time Buck tried to bite his throat,he met Spitz's own teeth. Then,each time Buck attacked,Spitz moved and bit him on the side as he passed.After a few minutes,Buck was covered in blood.
He attacked again,but this time turned at the last minute and went under Spitz,biting his left front leg. The bone broke,and Spitz was standing on three legs. Buck tried to knock Spitz down,and then repeated his earlier attack and broke Spitz's right front leg.
There was no hope for Spitz now. Buck got ready for his final attack,while the circle of sixty dogs watched,and crowded nearer and nearer,waiting for the end. At last Buck jumped,in and out,and Spitz went down in the snow. A second later the waiting pack was on top of him,and Spitz had disappeared. Buck stood and watched. The wild animal had made its kill. The new lead-dog
‘Well,what did I say? Buck’ s a real fighter,all right,’ said Francois the next morning when he discovered that Spitz had disappeared and that Buck was covered in blood.
‘Spitz fought like a wolf,’said Perrault,as he looked at the bites all over Buck.
‘And Buck fought like ten wolves,’ answered Francois.‘And we'll travel faster now. No more Spitz,no more trouble.’
Francois started to harness the dogs. He needed a new lead-dog,and decided that Sol-leks was the best dog that he had.But Buck jumped at Sol-leks and took his place.
‘Look at Buck!’ said Francois,laughing.‘He's killed Spitz,and now he wants to be lead-dog. Go away,Buck!’
He pulled Buck away and tried to harness Sol-leks again.Sol-leks was unhappy too. He was frightened of Buck,and when Francois turned his back,Buck took Sol-leks’ place again. Now Francois was angry.
‘I'll show you!’ he cried,and went to get a heavy club from the sledge.
Buck remembered the man in the red coat,and moved away. This time,when Sol-leks was harnessed as lead-dog,Buck did not try to move in. He kept a few metres away and circled around Francois carefully. But when Francois called him to his old place in front of Dave,Buck refused. He had won his fight with Spitz and he wanted to be lead-dog.
For an hour the two men tried to harness him. Buck did not run away,but he did not let them catch him. Finally,Francois sat down,and Perrault looked at his watch.It was getting late.The two men looked at one another and smiled Francois walked up to Sol-leks,took off his harness,led him back and harnessed him in his old place.Then he called Buck.All the other dogs were harnessed and the only empty place was now the one at the front But Buck did not move.
‘Put down the club,’ said Perrault.
Francois dropped the club,and immediately Buck came up to the front of the team.Francois harnessed him,and in a minute the sledge was moving.
Buck was an excellent leader. He moved and thought quick-ly and led the other dogs well. A new leader made no differ-ence to Dave and Sol-leks; they continued to pull hard .But the other dogs had had an easy life when Spitz was leading.They were surprised when Buck made them work hard and punished them for their mistakes Pike,the second dog,was usually lazy; but by the end of the first day he was pulling harder than he had ever pulled in his life. The first night in camp Buck fought Joe,another difficult dog,and after that there were no more problems with him. The team started to pull together,and to move faster and
第四篇:书虫系列读后感(通用)
书虫系列读后感(通用5篇)
当认真看完一本名著后,大家一定对生活有了新的感悟和看法,需要好好地就所收获的东西写一篇读后感了。可能你现在毫无头绪吧,下面是小编为大家收集的书虫系列读后感(通用5篇),欢迎阅读,希望大家能够喜欢。
书虫系列读后感1今年暑假,爸爸为我在书店选购了一本书,书名叫《做个快乐的小书虫》,一看到这个书名我就乐了,没想到还有这样名字的一本书,真是有趣!我倒要看看这本书写了什么。拿到书后我就迫不及待地开始翻阅起来。
这时候爸爸对我说:“你可要认真读哦,这本书对你帮助你阅读很有用。”听了爸爸的话,我不以为然,因为我本来就是一条“小书虫”啊,难道看书还不会么?并且我阅读速度在班级无人能及的,爸爸太小看我了吧。”看到我满不在乎的样子,爸爸严肃的说:“这本书会告诉你该怎么阅读一本书,一个人能识字看书并不代表会阅读,书读的速度快也不一定能把一本书读好,有可能是囫囵吞枣,什么也没有学到。”
听了爸爸的话,我拿起了这本《做个快乐的小书虫》认认真真看了起来,看完后我终于明白了:阅读除了要有“乐读”的态度,还要掌握阅读的技巧。一本书我们在阅读时不能光光只是看书中的故事,也不能看完以后一丢了之,而是要在看书的过程中,做一些读书笔记和摘抄一些书中优美的词句、段落,有时候还要动手写写自己的所思所想。只有养成这些良好的阅读习惯,才能把书中知识变成自己可用的知识,为自己的成长助力。
现在,我知道了爸爸为什么会为我买《做个快乐的小书虫》这本书了,读完这本书我感觉它就像一盏慧灯点亮了人们阅读的路,教会我们怎样从阅读中收获有用的知识去编织着成长的梦想,真是一本好书!
在看完《做个快乐的小书虫》的那天夜里,我梦见自己变成了一只快乐的会阅读的小书虫,遨游在书海里,阅读着思考着摘抄着。随书游遍了地球上的每一个角落。
书虫系列读后感2前些天,妈妈带我去书店买书。一本本课外书让我爱不释手,我挑了几本回来,其中有本叫《做个快乐的小书虫》让我读后印象非常深刻。
这本书的大概内容是这样的:爱读书的宝蓝和允熙原本是非常好的朋友,可是到五年级后她们没有分到一个班,不久允熙班上又转来了个插班生叫林媛静,她却喜欢打扮不喜欢看书,渐渐地允熙和林媛静走的很近,冷落了宝蓝,林媛静自己不喜欢读书还教坏了允熙。宝蓝看在眼里急在心里,为了“挽救”好朋友,宝蓝拉着允熙和媛静成立了读书三人小组,并且一起参加读书王大赛。因为媛静从来就不喜欢读书,宝蓝就千方百计想办法让林媛静爱上读书,宝蓝为林媛静挑选的第一本书是《少女喜欢的服饰搭配方法》让林媛静从此爱上了读书。调皮大王金民俊也因为林媛静的激怒而立志读书,向媛静发出挑战竞争“读书王”。“三剑客”在老师和家人的帮助下开始读书。然而,本以为“读书王”非她们莫属,没想到因为媛静的紧张,最后“读书王”还是被民俊拿走了。
这本书我读了好几遍,也思考了好多。宝蓝不抛弃,不放弃终于把好朋友允熙挽救了回来,同时也把林媛静这个不爱读书的坏学生成功拉入到一个爱学习爱读书的好学生行列。当然这也与媛静自己的努力和坚持是分不开的。从林媛静的转变过程中我也深深体会到做什么事只要坚持不懈、持之以恒,我们就一定能把事情做好,做成功。
一开始我总是在问自己:我们为什么要多读书、读好书呢?读的书多了,慢慢就明白了许多道理,读书可以陶冶自己的情操,让我们变得更加有修养。
书是人类进步的阶梯,读书能够让我们在极短的时间内,掌握大量的知识。通过读书我们还了解到世界上还有很多像我们这样的儿童现在还生活在战火之中,吃不饱穿不暖。我们感谢我们的党和政府,让我们今天的生活非常幸福。也感谢书让我认识了世界、了解了世界!
书虫系列读后感3笛卡尔说过:“读一本好书”,犹如同一个道德高尚的人交谈。在暑假中,我经常抱着一本心爱的书,独自徜徉在书的海洋里,那里面充满墨香文气。看,今天我又读起了巜做个快乐的小书虫》这本书,它让我懂得好习惯,贵在坚持。
故事讲的是:爱读书的南宝蓝和允熙原本是形影不离的好闺蜜,谁知却被“横空出世”的缓静给“插足”了。喜欢打扮的媛静偏偏最不喜欢看书,还把允熙给教坏了。为了“挽救”两个好朋友,宝蓝拉着允熙和媛静成立了读书“三剑客”小组,并且一起参加读书王大赛。“一波未平一波又起”,这时,淘气鬼金民俊故意向媛静发出挑战——要公平竞争“读书王”,“三剑客”在老师和家人的帮助下开始读书。然而,本以为“读书王”得他们莫属,没想到因为媛静的紧张和忐忑不安,最后“读书王”还是被民俊拿走了。但缓静也真正的懂得了阅读的重要。
战国时期吕蒙开始也是个大老粗,但自从有了阅读习惯后。吕蒙就成了一个文学家,他每天手不释卷。毛主席每天日理万机,还抽时间读书。一想到这,我不禁脸红,我以前每次都是在妈妈的“威逼”之下才看书。总是将看书视为一件“苦差事”。自从读了这本书后,妈妈说我变了一个人似的。有空就一头扎到书海里,美丽善良的白雪公主,天真无邪的.小红帽,神秘魔幻的绿野仙踪……都让我沉迷,让我陶醉。现在呢,我喜欢古典名著。会为唐僧师徒的安危提心吊胆;会为林黛玉的凄美爱情珊珊落泪;会为梁山英雄拍手叫好;会看诸葛亮实战空城计……我一边又一遍品读,一遍又一遍思考,体会其中的阴险诡计,体会其中的善良纯真。
我觉得现在的我就是一只地地道道的“小书虫”。炎热的夏天,酷热难耐,我独自坐在热得像蒸笼的书房,津津有味地读着书,电扇开到了最高档,吹得全是热风,可我似乎丝毫也没感觉到热——我完全沉浸在书中。“啪!”一只手打在我的胳膊上。“你都快被蚊子吃了!”不知道什么时候妈妈进来了,替我拍死了正在喝血的蚊子。奇怪,平时最怕蚊子的我竟然不知道自己的胳膊上正停着一只蚊子!妈妈心疼地说:“你看你胳膊、腿上全是蚊子叮得疙瘩!”我回过神来,摸摸脑袋不好意思的说:"“我咬书,蚊子咬我,我们是一对儿虫呀!”妈妈听了,笑着说:“好了好了,快去涂点药去吧!”我只好极不情愿地走出书房。自从爱上阅读,我的习作常被老师作为范文,作文也多次参加比赛获奖。我现在一天不读书就会闷得慌。
高尔基说过:“书籍是人类进步的阶梯。”冰心也说过:“读书好,好读书,读好书。”同学们,让我们做个“快乐的小书虫!”让我们在读书中快乐,在快乐中读书!
书虫系列读后感4同学们,你们一定也很喜欢读书吧,人们都这么说:“书是人类最好的朋友了”,如果是这样的话,那我们就打开《做个快乐的小书虫》这本书,我相信你看完这本书,一定会更喜欢读书的。
这本书主要讲了热爱读书的宝蓝和允熙原本是一对形影不离的好朋友,她们一起读书,一起玩耍。可是因为新转来的林媛静的出现,允熙和林媛静很快成了好朋友,冷落了宝蓝。媛静爱打扮却偏偏最不喜欢看书,甚至还把允熙给教坏了。为了帮助这两个好朋友,宝蓝拉着允熙和媛静成立了读书“三剑客”小组,并且一起参加了“读书王”大赛。这时,淘气鬼金民俊故意向她们发出了挑战——要公平竞争“读书王”的称号,读书“三剑客”在老师和家人的帮助下开始认真读书。本以为“读书王”的称号非她们莫属,但结果却出人意料,“读书王”的称号被金民俊拿走了。虽然媛静没能获得“读书王”的称号,但她真正懂得了读书的重要性,也是因为读书,让他们变得更加亲近了,他们一起向着更加美好的明天努力。
我一口气读完了这本书,久久地沉浸在书本的故事中,原来书籍竟有这么大的力量,将原本最不爱看书的媛静变成了一个快乐的 “书虫”。
“书籍是人类进步的阶梯。”读书可以学到知识,知识可以改变命运。纵观古今中外,有许许多多的人因书籍改变并成就了自己,那是因为他们读了“数不清”的书,学到了许多知识。他们沉浸在读书的快乐里,享受着读书的乐趣。北宋著名文学家苏洵小时候不爱读书,直到二十七岁才幡然醒悟,发愤图强。自己认真读书的同时,也影响着他的儿子们,后来三人一同进京赶考,相继金榜题名。父子三人被后人称为“三苏”,一同列入“唐宋八大家”,名垂千史。
同学们热爱读书吧!书能给我们带来快乐!让我们一起畅游书海,做一个快乐的小书童吧!
书虫系列读后感5暑假,老师让我们读一本好书,我读了《做个快乐的小书虫》,我被主人公宝蓝和林熙那种乐于助人、坚持爱读书的精神深深感动了。
这篇文章主要说了喜欢读书的一对好朋友,谁知被“横空出世”的媛静给“插足”了。爱美的媛静不爱看书,为了挽救两个好朋友,宝蓝拉着他们参加“读书王”比赛,他和林熙,媛静组成“读书三剑客”来对付民俊,在老师的帮助下,结果却出乎意料。民俊赢了,媛静也真正懂得了阅读的重要。
这篇文章使我深深体会到了:好习惯贵在坚持,阅读是人类进步阶梯。如果我们能将兴趣内化为精神力量,日积月累就会养成真正良好的习惯,如战国时期吕蒙,开始也是大老粗,但自从有了阅读习惯后,吕蒙就成了一个文学家,他每天手不释卷。由此看出好习惯的重要性,毛主席每天日理万机,还抽出时间读书,我也要养成阅读的好习惯,每天抽出时间阅读。
养习之功贵在坚持,要是自己产生对阅读的真心热爱才是最重要的。
第五篇:书虫系列英文读后感4
Have some kind of love, become blind but hypocritical in this abnormal society: Be unbearable Catherine vanity thin and weak, bumptious betraying;Have some kind of regret, be in so cruel society unexpected turn of events’ ferocious but frightful: Be frenzied continuous Heath cliff revenge, apprehensive helpless giving up all hopes.So-called human nature, so-called truth, good and beauty are borrowing evil ugly in front of appearing like that lowly, like that easy to break to pieces.Like that intense love , sinuous violent regret intertexture, love accommodates oneself to the extreme frenzied, regret accommodates oneself to the extreme demented , regretful to hurt , leave blood with sobbing , remaining endless scab is left ultimately.But disregarding this world be how force and hold back our pure but fine copy of the first edition human nature, anyway dogleg and confine, how the misleading sum restrains , we essential points is more soberly comparing with others checks self doctrine: "Love needs to being apt such that concealing one's real feelings , Aide are sincere , being apt such that Ling Ran is apt such that being duty-bound and will not turn back firmly, can not love to the anesthesia , love to the life regret , love but to agony.Continue being
perplexed among indifferent enmity till destroying others also not destroying yourself , need to make great efforts to shake off the net vanishing into thin air , finish spending every day , conscientious cherishing flat and plain everyone, who loves you and you love.That distinctive and heavyhearted as well ruthless quality grabs Wuthering-Heights my heart deeply, that the times love tragedy leaves drapery behind, perform but ceaselessly by us, when ability is end? Or, this paradox is to redeem have no way to save forever.Vocabulary:
1、ablaze
3、abrasive
5、hoarse
7、inaudible
10、kid-nip
11、lamentable
13、mega
16、mock
17、raucous
21、sanity
22、sapphism
23、sarcastically
25、smock
26、mocha
27、splosh
28、stravaig
29、decay
33、murky
38、pinnacle
39、consent
43、vigilant
45、purplish
47、infamous