Fast Food Opinion

#学习笔记#

现学现卖,一个新词
微博时代,盛产意见
貌似百家争鸣百花艳
其实一律千篇蜡味泛
你争我抢跳着脚地喊
抛出的只不过是一堆
fast food opinion.

【fast food opinion】 A blatantly regurgitated, prepackaged opinion. An opinion that requires no research, independent thought, wit, or creativity of one’s own. Generally political, or theological in nature.

USE YOUR BRAIN FIRST. DO NOT KEEP GIVING ANY FAST FOOD OPINION!

The Art of Drowning

The Art of Drowning

by   Billy Collins

I wonder how it all got started, this business
about seeing your life flash before your eyes
while you drown, as if panic, or the act of submergence,
could startle time into such compression, crushing
decades in the vice of your desperate, final seconds.

After falling off a steamship or being swept away
in a rush of floodwaters, wouldn’t you hope
for a more leisurely review, an invisible hand
turning the pages of an album of photographs-
you up on a pony or blowing out candles in a conic hat.

How about a short animated film, a slide presentation?
Your life expressed in an essay, or in one model photograph?
Wouldn’t any form be better than this sudden flash?
Your whole existence going off in your face
in an eyebrow-singeing explosion of biography-
nothing like the three large volumes you envisioned.

Survivors would have us believe in a brilliance
here, some bolt of truth forking across the water,
an ultimate Light before all the lights go out,
dawning on you with all its megalithic tonnage.
But if something does flash before your eyes
as you go under, it will probably be a fish,

a quick blur of curved silver darting away,
having nothing to do with your life or your death.
The tide will take you, or the lake will accept it all
as you sink toward the weedy disarray of the bottom,
leaving behind what you have already forgotten,
the surface, now overrun with the high travel of clouds.

读书人:弗洛·吉布森(Flo Gibson)

照片上的这位慈祥的大妈名叫弗洛·吉布森(Flo Gibson),an Audio-Book Reader。本月7日,她在华盛顿的家中去世,享年86岁。在我国,可能她应该会被划归“说书艺人”一类吧。但她只是读书——很平静地读书。很多人都喜欢在健身或者在驾车的时候听她和缓的朗读文学名著。她一生录制了1134部文学作品。短则几个小时,长则十二、三小时。她为经典文学的推广和普及做出了巨大的贡献。难怪《纽约时报》书评栏专文纪念她的去世。原文如下:

January 15, 2011

Flo Gibson, Grande Dame of Audiobooks, Dies at 86

By MARGALIT FOX

Flo Gibson, who for decades read soothingly to Americans as they toiled at the gym, behind the wheel or over housework, died on Jan. 7 at her home in Washington. Mrs. Gibson, the universally acknowledged grande dame of audiobooks, was 86.

The cause was cancer, her daughter Carrie Gibson said. At her death, Mrs. Gibson was halfway through taping “Les Misérables,” which would have been, give or take a title or two, the 1,134th recorded book of her career.

Mrs. Gibson was the founder of, and chief reader for, Audio Book Contractors, which she ran for nearly three decades from a specially built recording studio in the basement of her home. The company produces audiobooks for sale to libraries and individual consumers.

Audio Book Contractors, which specializes in unabridged recordings of the classics, seeks out an audience for whom a well-told story on tape and the latest bodice-ripper tend to be mutually exclusive. (That said, Mrs. Gibson did record “East Lynne,” an 1861 novel by Mrs. Henry Wood that The Chicago Tribune once cheerfully described as “riveting Victorian smut.”)

Known for her impeccable diction — she was a former radio actress — and scrupulous fealty to the text, Mrs. Gibson narrated everything from “The Wind in the Willows” to capacious adult books like “Pride and Prejudice” (11 hours, 41 minutes) and “Middlemarch,” which spans 31 hours, 7 minutes, over 24 cassettes, an effort that took her more than 10 weeks in the studio.

Today, thousands of audiobooks appear annually — read by authors, celebrities and professional voice-over artists — and other companies besides hers do the classics. But Mrs. Gibson’s work, colleagues say, was notable on several counts.

For one thing, she was an early entrant in the field, starting out in the mid-1970s recording talking books for the blind for the Library of Congress. She went on to found Audio Book Contractors well before recorded books were commonplace in stores and libraries.

For another, she was almost certainly the field’s most prolific practitioner. A busy voice-over artist might typically narrate several hundred books in a career; to record more than 1,100, as Mrs. Gibson did, is almost beyond contemplation.

What was more, reviewers agreed that if one were to invest, say, the 36 hours and 7 minutes required to hear “Anna Karenina,” then there was no better voice to hear it in than Mrs. Gibson’s: deep and throaty, it evoked a firm but favorite schoolteacher and let her juggle men’s and women’s roles with ease.

Mrs. Gibson was also praised for her meticulous preparation (to tackle the Brontë sisters, she haunted Yorkshire to soak up dialect) and for the intimate compact that appeared to exist between her and the listener. As she often said, she approached every narration as if she were playing to an audience of one.

Her scrapbooks of fan mail attest to the results. An upholsterer’s assistant once wrote Mrs. Gibson to say that her “Pride and Prejudice” had made “the stitches melt down into insignificance” as she labored over an antique chair.

Florence Corona Anderson was born in San Francisco on Feb. 7, 1924. After earning a bachelor’s degree in dramatic literature from the University of California, Berkeley, she studied with the noted acting teacher Sanford Meisner at the Neighborhood Playhouse in New York.

She acted in several West Coast radio serials — including “Pat Novak for Hire,” which starred a young Jack Webb — before marrying Carlos Gibson, a Peruvian diplomat, and raising four children.

Soon after her youngest child left for college, Mrs. Gibson auditioned for the Library of Congress and was accepted. She later narrated books on tape for several commercial producers before starting Audio Book Contractors in 1983.

As Mrs. Gibson discovered, a narrator’s experience of literature differs crucially from a civilian’s. Though she adored Henry James, she was often moved to shake her fist and shout at him: “Why don’t you punctuate? Why don’t you paragraph?” She invariably forgave him, though, and recorded much of his work.

Mrs. Gibson’s husband, whom she married in 1947, died in 1989. Besides her daughter Carrie, she is survived by two other daughters, Nancy Gibson, known as Derry, and Katherine Gibson Bolland; a brother, Buck Anderson; and three grandchildren. A son, Chris, died in 1985.

Audio Book Contractors, which offers hundreds of books on tape and CD, continues to operate. Many of its titles, including dozens narrated by Mrs. Gibson, can also be purchased as digital downloads from audible.com.

What with treadmills and traffic and troublesome chairs, her voice will soothe listeners for decades to come.

“纽贝里奖”和“斯顿沃奖”

老实说,此前从未听说过这个“纽贝里奖”。根据以下这篇《纽约时报》述评,知道了这个“纽贝里奖”主要是奖掖新人新作的一个奖项。“斯顿沃奖”是少儿作品奖项。今年获得“纽贝里”和“斯顿沃”殊荣的作品在下文中亦有介绍:

Newbery Awarded to Debut Author

By JULIE BOSMAN

An old-fashioned novel about a scrappy girl searching for the answers to a spy mystery in small-town Kansas won the John Newbery Medal on Monday for the year’s outstanding contribution to children’s literature.

Moon Over Manifest,” a debut novel by Clare Vanderpool, is set in the Great Depression and tells the story of Abilene Tucker, a 12-year-old whose father sends her for the summer to Manifest, a Kansas town populated by bootleggers and coal-mining immigrants. There she solves a longtime mystery with the help of local characters.

The Newbery award, widely considered the most prestigious honor in children’s literature and an inevitable boon to sales, was announced by the American Library Association at its midwinter meeting in San Diego.

The association’s other top award, the Randolph Caldecott Medal, for the most distinguished picture book for children, went to “A Sick Day for Amos McGee,” illustrated by Erin E. Stead and written by Philip C. Stead.

The association’s Stonewall Children’s and Young Adult Literature Award, for an English-language book “of exceptional merit relating to the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered experience,” went this year to “Almost Perfect,” by Brian Katcher, a novel about a high school senior who grapples with his romantic encounter with a girl who turns out to be transgendered; the girl later attempts suicide.

Ms. Vanderpool, the Newbery winner, said she wrote “Moon Over Manifest” over five years, beginning in 2001, stealing bits of time while raising her four children.

“I would write during nap times, during ‘Sesame Street,’ that kind of stuff,” said Ms. Vanderpool, 46, by telephone from her home in Wichita, Kan., where she was born and reared. “It was just a nice little escape, a nice hobby. Then fortunately this year it got published.”

As part of her research, she traveled to Frontenac, Kan., in the southeast corner of the state, a town she called “the bootlegging capital of the Midwest.” (It also happened to be the home of her mother’s side of the family.) There she read newspaper articles on microfilm at the library and scoured old yearbooks helpfully supplied by local residents.

“As I started doing research, that’s when the story started to take off,” Ms. Vanderpool said. “It really is the story of a young girl looking for clues of her father, wondering if he’s coming back to get her and trying to figure out for herself what home means to her.”

The book was published by Delacorte Press Books for Young Readers, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books. It has sold 12,000 copies so far, a spokeswoman said.

Though “Moon Over Manifest” did not appear on the New York Times best-seller list, it was selected as a pick by IndieBound, an American Booksellers Association initiative of independent-store owners; it is a cherished stamp of approval. Sarah Bagby, the owner of Watermark Books and Cafe in Wichita, said the store had sold “hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of copies.”

“Clare took her experience of growing up in a neighborhood in a square mile in Wichita, Kan., and she took that experience and made it universal,” Ms. Bagby said. “It has a historic voice that connects the past to the future.”

The winner of the Caldecott medal, “A Sick Day for Amos McGee,” was also a debut by its authors, a husband-and-wife team in Ann Arbor, Mich. It is the story of a zookeeper and his tender friendship with the animals, and was published by Roaring Brook Press, an imprint of the Macmillan Children’s Publishing Group.

Mr. Stead said he and Ms. Stead conceived the project in 2006, when they were living in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn. (They first met in a high school art class in Dearborn, Mich.) Now they work together in the same studio in Ann Arbor, when Mr. Stead is not teaching graphic design at Washtenaw Community College, a side job.

In a telephone interview from Ann Arbor, he wondered aloud if the book’s simplicity made it stand out among the hundreds of other possible candidates.

“We were a little concerned before the book came out that it was too quiet,” Mr. Stead said. “It is very simple. It has very muted colors. It’s a quiet story with a very simple story arc. In a weird way, maybe that was what made it stand out. Maybe people were ready for a story about kindness.”

“福勒效应”

先来看从黄集伟大孤岛客的一周语文里转来的定义:

语出智利《第三版时报》本周文章,原题为“人们为何需要新年预言”。文章从2009年12月31日某预言家预言2010年智利将发生地震或海啸说起。作者 认为,智利地震看似被他言中,事实上科学家早在2009年3月即发出过地震警告,而那位预言家的另一些预言并未实现。不过,尽管预言常常不靠谱,但尤其是 在新年伊始之际,人们仍会对一些耸人听闻的预言津津乐道。对这一普遍现象目前最有力的解释是“福勒效应”,即人们总倾向于接受那些看似专门描述自己的普遍 性评价。美国加利福尼亚大学心理学家福勒曾在1948年对学生进行性格测试,并根据测试结果对每个人的性格进行描述,所有学生都认为福勒的描述符合自身情 况,最终却得知原来每个人得到的描述都一样。通过实验福勒证明,如果人们认为某些描述或预言是专门针对自己且符合己愿,便很容易认同那些模棱两可的描述或 预言。福勒效应的心理学依据是,人们普遍迷恋那种被包装为定制性评价的普遍评价,并渴望凭此控制那些常常不可控制的世事。

我的看法:由此则不难理解为什么现在那些所谓的星相运程那么热闹;也能够帮助我们在一定程度上理解为什么好多人需要一种宗教信仰的支撑;也能够理解为什么有那么多人就是不愿意用自己的脑子思考。。。

约翰·伊夫林(John Evelyn, 1620-1706)

伊夫林出生在位于英格兰东南部萨里地区沃顿小镇上一个富裕家庭里。家庭财富主要靠生产火药积累起来。苏萨克斯郡的首府刘易斯城是伊夫林成长的地方。他曾在牛津大学的别列尔学院和伦敦的中殿律师学院接受教育。他曾经参加过保皇党的军队,后因担心会危及到兄长在沃顿的地产,很快便离开保皇党军,决定在英国内战期间不参加保皇党阵营,而投身到国会党阵营中。然而,为避免更深地卷入英国内战,1643年开始,伊夫林开始出国旅游,先后去了意大利、法国等地。1644 年,他在罗马参观了“英格兰圣徒学院”(Venerable English College),这是一个专门为英格兰培养天主教牧师的地方。1646年,他参加了在意大利帕多瓦市举办的解剖学讲座。

1647年,伊夫林在法国巴黎与当时英国驻巴黎大使的女儿,玛丽·布朗,结了婚。直到1652年共和政体时期,伊夫林夫妇才返回英国,并且定居在伦敦东南部的戴普福德。伊夫林的事业随着王政复辟时期的到来而有了巨大转机。1660年,伊夫林受到查理二世的礼遇,接受了各种委任。其中最重要的是在查理二世同荷兰人作战期间(1665~1667,1672~1674),他被委任负责管理生病和负伤的水手和俘虏。此间,他不幸身染重疾,花费颇多。所幸得到了塞缪尔·匹普斯的热情帮助。从此两人便结下了深厚的友谊。1660年,伊夫林参与创建皇家协会。次年,他写作并发表《论空气的不适和笼罩伦敦的浓烟》(The Inconveniencie of the Aer and Smoak of London Dissipated,1662)。这是第一部论述伦敦不断恶化的污染问题的著作。伊夫林1706年过世,被葬在沃顿的圣约翰教堂里的伊夫林殡仪室内。

伊夫林的文学成就主要体现在他的《日记》(Diary,1818年第1版)和《戈多尔芬夫人的一生》(Life of Mrs Godolphin, 1647)中。伊夫林与同时代其他几位著名日记作家(如塞缪尔·匹普斯)一样,终身坚持日记写作。他从11岁起开始记日记。他的全套《日记》发表于1818年。他的《日记》是为自己写的,但日记内容却很少谈及他本人。《日记》中既有对事件的单纯记录,也有精心撰写的文艺小品,包括对地方、事件和当代人物的描写,此外还有关于各种布道的记录。因此,伊夫林的《日记》不愧为60余年英国生活的见证,是有关17世纪英国社会、文化、宗教和政治生活的珍贵史料,具有极大的历史价值。比如他在日记中见证了查理一世和奥利弗·克伦威尔的死亡、最后一次在伦敦肆虐的大瘟疫、以及1666年的伦敦大火等。

1657年3月29日,关于克伦威尔,伊夫林写道:“摄政王奥利弗现在已经是实际上的君王了。他的追随者们正在为他请愿,要给他正式的头衔;但是出于担心,他还是不敢完全解散他的起义军”。1658年9月3日在写到克伦威尔之死时,伊夫林只有简单的一句话:“被称为摄政王的大叛军头目奥利弗·克伦威尔死了”。

《戈多尔芬夫人的一生》是17世纪最令人感动的传记作品之一。戈多尔芬夫人原名叫布莱吉,是在宫廷里伺候女王的宫女。大约在1670年前后,约翰·伊夫林对这位宫女产生了慈父般的感情。后来宫女布莱吉秘密嫁给了后来成为财政大臣的戈多尔芬先生。1678年,这位戈多尔芬夫人生了一个小孩后去世。于是伊夫林就专门为她撰写了这篇感人肺腑的传记。

伊夫林是一个多产作家。他的作品题材广泛——神学、钱币学、政治、园艺、建筑以及烹调,他都有所涉猎。他对斯图亚特时期政治面貌和文化生活的描述是今天人们了解那一特定时期的重要依据。伊夫林在园艺和林木方面的知识非常丰富。1664年出版的《森林志,又名林木论》(Sylva, or A Discourse of Forest Trees, 1664)详细叙述各种树木的种类、培育方法及用途。这套林木专论在1670年和1679年还分别出版过经过修补和增订的新的版本。最后一个修订版发表于1706年作者去世之后不久。

伊夫林和匹普斯一样,也是一位图书收藏家:他一生收藏各类图书和各种小册子,总数达4,680多册。许多图书上都有他亲笔书写的座右铭。伊夫林和匹普斯之间,除拥有共同的记日记的爱好以外,还保持着经常的通信联系,很多书信一直保存至今。