16£®When I was fifteen£¬I announced to my English class that I was going to write my own books£®Half the students smiled£¨1£©A£¬and even worse£¬the rest nearly fell out of their chairs laughing£®"Don't be£¨2£©D£®Only geniuses can become writers£®"the English teacher said£¬"And you are getting a D this term£®"I was so£¨3£©Bthat I burst into tears£®That night I wrote a short £¨4£©Apoem about broken dreams and mailed it to the newspaper£®To my£¨5£©C£¬they published it and sent me two dollars£®I was a published and paid writer£®I showed my teacher and fellow students£®They laughed£¬"Just plain dumb luck£¬"the teacher said£®I tasted£¨6£©C£» I'd sold the first thing I'd ever written£®That was more than any of them had done and if it was just dumb luck£¬that was fine with me£®
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11£®A good reader becomes sooner or later a good book buyer£®The sooner£¬the better£®The reading done in a book drawn from a library can not be so pleasant at the moment nor so  permanently useful as the reading done in our own copy£®
    A book which is worth reading is likely to be read more than once£¬and at each reading some idea or some statement makes such an impression that we wish to refer to it again£® Some readers underline the page as they read£¬but I find that a page which I have underlined can not give me so many fresh impressions as one which has no marks on it£®My habit is to make my own index£¨Ë÷Òý£©of a book as I read£®I put down the number of the page and a word or two to identify the thought or the fact which I get from it£®On a second or third reading I am likely to double or triple the size of this index£®This is my substitute for underlining£®Most of the books in my library are so indexed that I can find quickly the passage which from time to time I wish to look up£®
    To use a book in this way£¬organizing it for continued usefulness year after year£¬we  must£¬of course£¬do our reading in a copy which belongs to us£®The books I buy are chiefly   those of less expensive editions£®
    As I have grown older and the number of books on my shelves has increased£¬I appre-ciate editions which do not take much room£®By careful and continuous selection I keep my  librarv down to ten thousand books£®This would be£¬of course£¬too large a number for any but a professional scholar or writer£®But my advice to a book lover is to weed but his library  at least once every two years£¬giving away the books which are not likely to be read again£®And never never buy a book which you will not immediately read£®A library bought only for looks is not literature£¬but indoor decoration£®
61£®Which of the following best explains the underlined part in the first paragraph£¿
A
A£®Reading your own book benefits you more than reading a copy from a library£®
B£®Reading a book at home is more pleasant and useful than doing it in a library£®
C£®Reading a book in a library is more pleasant and useful than doing it at home£®
D£®A book drawn from a library cannot take as much time as your own copy£®
62£®What is the disadvantage of underlining according to the author£¿C
A£®Underlined books look old and not worth reading£®
B£®The lines make it difficult for the reader to concentrate£®
C£®Underlined books cannot give the reader enough fresh impressions£®
D£®The reader cannot find the passage he or she wishes to read again£®
63£®What would the author's index look like after a third reading£¿B
A£®It contains the number of the page and a word or two£®
B£®It contains the number of the page and 3 to 6 words£®
C£®It numbers the page£¬the paragraph and the lines£®
D£®It fills the cover of the book with numbers and words£®
64£®Which of the following books would the author most probably like to keep£¿D
A£®Big expensive good books£®   
B£®Thin and cheap books£®
C£®Books with lots of pictures£®   
D£®Good books in cheap£¬thin editions£®
65£®Which of the following can be inferred from the last paragraph£¿B
A£®The writer has read only some of the books in his library£®
B£®The writer is a professional scholar or writer£®
C£®The writer has never given away any books in his library£®
D£®The writer's library is indoor decoration rather than literature£®

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