08 考研英语完型新题型讲义标题内容搭配题 <br /> Directions: Questions 41 to 52 are based on book reviews <br />given below. Answer each of the questions by choosing the right <br />book(s) marked by A-H. You may choose some of the books more <br />than once. <br /> The book is <br /> a guide for those who have recently bee interested in <br />studying animals and plants. 41._ <br /> a guide book for walkers. 42. __ <br /> concerned with the need for us to know more about the <br />variety of species on Earth. 43. __ <br /> arguing that some large-scale projects may be disastrous <br />undertakings. 44.__ <br /> about a species which is well-known but widely <br />misunderstood. 45., __ <br /> an influential aount of environmental damage. 46. __ <br /> an emotional aount of one species. 47. __ <br /> written in the style of a different type of book. 48.__ <br /> suggesting that action is necessary to prevent disaster. <br />49. __ <br /> an aount of a research project. 50. __ <br /> a beautifully-written work by an exceptional character. <br />51. __ <br /> re-released in paperback and is very popular. 52.__ <br /> A <br /> This book was first published in 1982---but its re-release <br />in paperback is wele because it is still one of the most <br />attractive and useful guides for amateur naturalists, <br />especially those starting from scratch. <br /> Part of the book is devoted to experiments in the home, <br />such as how to dissect a cockroach, keep a snake or mount a <br />skeleton. And for those who just want to read about some of the <br />world's richest habitats (动植物的生境) , this book is an <br />equally good panion. <br /> B <br /> Rightly dubbed "the first classic of the modern <br />environment movement," Silent Spring remains a book of <br />extraordinary depth and prescience. If the campaign against DDT <br />has been largely won in the developed World, there's still a <br />fight going on in the South. But this is not just a book about <br />the dangers of pesticides: it is an intensely evocative and <br />powerful aount of the rupture between ourselves and nature, and <br />of the illusions peddled by politicians to justify that <br />rupture. <br /> C <br /> I don't know off-hand how many adjectives and adverbs <br />could legitimately be used to describe falling water, but I <br />suspect Mary Welsh has all but emptied the store while guiding <br />us to these 30 assorted spouts, gills, forces and falls. <br /> Her aim is two-fold. She wants us to share her fascination <br />with spumescent cataracts (that's a new one ) and also her <br />delight in birds and plants. Consequently the text reads more <br />like a nature notebook than a walks guide. <br /> That criticism aside, Mary Welsh writes a good deal better <br />than most guidebook authors, while the plementary pen drawings <br />by Linda Waters add their own charm. Most of the chose...