"Love it."
"Me too. Settled then?" he asked and smiled his soft smile.
It didn't surprise me that I nodded.
After the reading and the curry1 dinner, I went into Malcolm's sitting room where there were more books than I'd ever seen on anyone's shelves. I began to read the titles.
"Help yourself," said Malcolm.
"Thanks. But if I read a book, I have add it to my collection."
"Strange, same here." He waved his arms towards the shelves. "But look where it's got me."
"I'd hate to be without books. They're ... friends."
"That sounds like lonely," said Malcolm.
I turned and pulled out a book.
"Are you?"
"Am I what?"
"Lonely?"
I shrugged2.
"Not really."
"Not really but what?"
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My voice came from a distance as I tried to answer him.
"I'm choosy about my friends. Don't have a great many."
"I'm listening," said Malcolm and sat down, indicating the armchair opposite him.
"My childhood was ... I mean, my mother loved moving around. She had no trouble putting down roots all over the place. I hated it! Books were the constant things, so I buried myself in them."
"Hell, sounds familiar."
I sat down in the armchair.
"I had very academic parents," said Malcolm. "Was an afterthought, perhaps a mistake even. They loved me in their vague intellectual way but left me alone to get on with growing up. Hence the books."
"That's lonely, too," I said.
When I left, I took along a couple of Malcolm's books.
My friendship with Malcolm grew but my curiousity remained. Who did I remind him of? My mother? If so, could he be my father? Although Mom had never bothered with books, our physical similarities, apart from my tallness, were undeniable. She had never told me much about the man who had fathered me. Clever, was all she had usually said. Once though, when I had been ill with chicken pox, and hot and scratchy, she had relented.
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"What was he like?"
"Skinniest man you ever saw."
"Where'd you meet him?"
"In a park. I was catching3 a suntan and these papers started blowin' in my face. I was a bit cheesed off at them blowin' all over me and then this man comes runnin'. He grabbed4 and grabbed but couldn't catch them all. So he jus' stood still, a helpless look on his face. It was so funny, I started laughin'."
1 curry
n.咖哩粉,咖哩飯菜;v.用咖哩粉調(diào)味,用馬櫛梳,制革
參考例句:
Rice makes an excellent complement to a curry dish.有咖喱的菜配米飯最棒。 Add a teaspoonful of curry powder.加一茶匙咖喱粉。
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2 shrugged
vt.聳肩(shrug的過去式與過去分詞形式)
參考例句:
Sam shrugged and said nothing. 薩姆聳聳肩膀,什么也沒說。 She shrugged, feigning nonchalance. 她聳聳肩,裝出一副無所謂的樣子。 來自《簡明英漢詞典》
3 catching
adj.易傳染的,有魅力的,迷人的,接住
參考例句:
There are those who think eczema is catching.有人就是認(rèn)為濕疹會傳染。 Enthusiasm is very catching.熱情非常富有感染力。
4 grabbed
v.搶先,搶占( grab的過去式和過去分詞 );(尤指匆忙地)?。痪鹑?;(尤指自私、貪婪地)撈取
參考例句:
He was grabbed by two men and frogmarched out of the hall. 他被兩個男人緊抓雙臂押出大廳。 She grabbed the child's hand and ran. 她抓住孩子的手就跑。
《Staring Me In The Face 》添加時間:2024-12-14;更新時間:2025-03-09