首页
登录
职称英语
(1)Peter Benchley, 65, the author and conservationist who wrote Jaws, the sh
(1)Peter Benchley, 65, the author and conservationist who wrote Jaws, the sh
游客
2024-11-21
19
管理
问题
(1)Peter Benchley, 65, the author and conservationist who wrote Jaws, the shark-attack novel that became a classic movie and provided a nation with thrills, chills and recurring nightmares, died Feb. 11 at his Princeton, N.J., home.
(2)A relative said he died of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, a progressive scarring of the lungs.
(3)Through the book, which was Mr. Benchley’s first novel, and the movie, for which he contributed to the screenplay, Mr. Benchley aroused a nation’s deepest fears about undersea dangers, beach hazards and the carnivorous perils of an arching mouthful of menacingly curved, triangular teeth.
(4)Jaws told of a silent, monstrous predator that chewed up the lives, limbs and summer vacations of unfortunate swimmers at an Atlantic Ocean coastal resort.
(5)More than 20 million copies of the novel have been printed since it appeared in 1974. The Steven Spielberg movie became a film touchstone.
(6)The son and grandson of writers, and a writer himself since age 16, Mr. Benchley drew for his novel on lore he had learned as a boy on Nantucket, south of Cape Cod, Mass., and from years of musings over a report he had once read about the appearance off Long Island of a 4,550-pound great white shark.
(7)He asked himself, he said, not so much what did happen but what could happen if such a predator emerged from the deep.
(8)After graduation from Harvard, Mr. Benchley traveled around the world for a year, and then served for six months in a Marine Corps Reserve program. He wrote for The Washington Post, became television editor of Newsweek magazine and worked as a speechwriter in the Lyndon B. Johnson White House.
(9)"My idea was to tell my first novel as a sort of long story... just to see if I could do it," he once said.
(10)He told an interviewer that after interesting a publisher in the book and receiving an advance, it was time to put up.
(11)Married and the father of two young children, Mr. Benchley rented space on the premises of a furnace supply company. Suggesting, among other things, that talent, determination and energy can overcome any environment, he described the "clang and clank of hammers of sheet metal" that formed the background for the creation of Jaws.
(12)In his $50 a month quarters in Pennington, N.J., Mr. Benchley produced a cultural landmark that touched the nation’s psyche and provided a world of bad dreams. It was there that he put down these opening words, which in vivid brevity hinted at horrors to come:
(13)"The great fish moved silently through the night water, propelled by short sweeps of its crescent tail."
(14)Two paragraphs later, a man and woman come out of a house. The man is drunk.
(15)"’First a swim,’ the woman says. ’To clear your head.’"
(16)For Mr. Benchley, at 33, the book provided the acclaim and success about which most aspiring novelists can only dream. Sales took off, money rolled in, Hollywood clamored and the fame, he told People magazine, was "awesome."
(17)In time, he became known as a naturalist and conservationist who produced films and television programs about the ocean environment.
(18)"He cared very much about sharks. He spent most of his life trying to explain to people that if you are in the ocean, you’re in the shark’s territory, so it behooves you to take precautions," his wife told the Associated Press.
(19)"If we kill everything in the ocean, and if we pollute the ocean to a pointwhere it can’t sustain life, we’re committing suicide," Mr. Benchley once said.
(20)Mr. Benchley, who was born and grew up in New York, was the son of author Nathaniel Benchley, who wrote The Russians Are Coming! The Russians Are Coming! among other works. He was also the grandson of the celebrated American humor writer and wit Robert Benchley.
(21)Peter Benchley once told interviewer Bret Gilliam that his father knew the financial straits and shoals of the writing life and tried to discourage him from it.
(22)But when the father recognized the depth of his son’s teenage interest in writing, he subsidized him for two summers at summer-job wages. The son had one duty: to sit alone for four hours or until he wrote 1,000 words, "whichever came first."
(23)Mr. Benchley told Gilliam that he found he could withstand the regimen, and at 21, he sold his first story, to Vogue magazine.
(24)In addition to Jaws, Mr. Benchley wrote The Deep, Q Clearance which was inspired by his White House days, and other books.
(25)In addition to his wife, whom he married in 1964, his survivors include children, Tracy, Clayton and Christopher, and five grandchildren. [br] What’s the meaning of "put up" in the tenth paragraph?
选项
A、Erect.
B、Attach.
C、Raise.
D、Start.
答案
D
解析
该段原句意为“一旦出版商对自己的书感兴趣并拿到预付款,他就可以开始写作了”,所以put up应该表示“开始动手做”,故选D。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3854949.html
相关试题推荐
______wasaPulitzerPrize-winningprolificAmericanauthorwhowroteTheJungle
______istheauthorofTotheLighthouse,alandmarknovelofmodernismwhichsk
WilliamFaulkner,authorof______,wasawardedtheNobelPrizeofLiteraturein
WhowastheauthorofMoby-Dick?A、NathanielHawthorne.B、RalphWaldoEmerson.C、
DouglasAdams,thelatelamentedauthorofTheHitchhiker’sGuidetotheGal
DouglasAdams,thelatelamentedauthorofTheHitchhiker’sGuidetotheGal
DouglasAdams,thelatelamentedauthorofTheHitchhiker’sGuidetotheGal
OnceimpotentduetoColdWarrivalries,ithasregainedmuchoftheauthoritya
Wildlifeconservationistssaythecoverthatfoliageprovidesforanimalsisequ
PASSAGETHREE[br]Whydidthecoastguardcomeouttohelptheauthor?Becauseth
随机试题
STUDENTLIFEATCANTERBURYCOLLEGEMostofthecoursesatCanter
Pub-talkA)Pub-talk,themostpopularactivityinallpubs,isanative
姜炙时,一般每100kg药物用生姜A.10kgB.6kgC.15kgD.1kgE
共用题干 徐先生1月15日以5元的价格购买了100手A公司股票,到6月16日该
房地产方面的部门规章主要有( )。A.《商品房销售管理办法》 B.《房地
某机床车间为完成生产任务需开动30台设备,每台开动班次为两班,看管定额为每人看
甲得知乙在贩卖毒品,于是冒充缉毒警察,用手铐将乙铐在水管上,拿走毒品。之后,甲将
霍奇金淋巴瘤的肿瘤细胞包括( )。A.R-S细胞 B.组织细胞 C.淋巴细
一个矩阵中存在一条从左到右的曲线。如果这条曲线右边的终点高于左边的起点,则称该曲
潘恩曾言:“在专制政府中国王便是法律,同样地,在自由国家中,法律便应该成为国王。
最新回复
(
0
)