小木屋系列是美国作家罗兰·英格斯·怀德,一个拓荒者家庭的女儿根据早年自身经历写成,内容生动活泼,文字朴实流畅,一经出版便广受欢迎。曾获美国纽伯瑞儿童文学奖,并入选美国教育部评选100本孩子喜欢的童书、美国国家图书馆推荐中小学生必读书目等。本上下册版包含小木屋系列9册全部内容,以英文原版出版,让读者品读原汁原味的经典名著。
《小木屋全集 : THE COMPLETE COLLECTION OF THE LITTLE HOUSE (英文原版·上下册)》一书内容生动活泼,文字朴实流畅。作者在描述生活方式、劳动过程时,具体而精确;在抒情写景时,却又细腻深刻。读者从中可以学到涉及生活各方面的用语和地道的表达方式,从而提高自己的英语水平。同时,又可以从这套丛书中学到一些美国的历史和地理知识,了解美国人民在早期开荒移民时期与自然界的暴风雨、蝗虫、野兽等作斗争的情形;了解到他们砍伐森林、开垦土地、种植作物、畜养牛羊、建造自己家园的艰苦劳动;以及拓荒者日常家庭生活、文娱活动、节日团聚的欢乐情景。
本上下册版为英文原版,涵盖小木屋系列9册全部内容,以国际流行小32开本出版,这套丛书适合初高中或大学低年级学生作为课外泛读材料,对于英语爱好者同样适用。
罗兰·英格斯·怀德,生于美国中部威斯康星州的拓荒者家庭。系美国20世纪四五十年代著名的儿童文学作家。罗兰从65岁才开始儿童文学的创作,毕其一生所完成的9本“小木屋”系列小说,现均为世界儿童文学的经典之作。
Book 1
Little House in the Big Woods
01 LITTLE HOUSE IN THE BIG WOODS 002
02 WINTER DAYS AND WINTER NIGHTS 010
03 The Long Rifle 018
04 CHRISTMAS 023
05 SUNDAYS 032
06 TWO BIG BEARS 039
07 THE SUGAR SNOW 046
08 DANCE AT GRANDPA’S 051
09 GOING TO TOWN 060
10 SUMMERTIME 068
11 HARVEST 077
12 THE WONDERFUL MACHINE 082
13 THE DEER IN THE WOOD 089
Book 2
Little House On the Prairie
01 GOING WEST 094
02 CROSSING THE CREEK 100
03 CAMP ON THE HIGH PRAIRIE 105
04 PRAIRIE DAY 109
05 THE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE 115
06 MOVING IN 123
07 THE WOLF-PACK 127
08 TWO STOUT DOORS 135
09 A FIRE ON THE HEARTH 139
10 A ROOF AND A FLOOR 144
11 INDIANS IN THE HOUSE 149
12 FRESH WATER TO DRINK 155
13 TEXAS LONGHORNS 161
14 INDIAN CAMP 165
15 FEVER ’N’ AGUE 169
16 FIRE IN THE CHIMNEY 176
17 PA GOES TO TOWN 180
18 THE TALL INDIAN 187
19 MR. EDWARDS MEETS SANTA CLAUS 192
20 A SCREAM IN THE NIGHT 199
21 INDIAN JAMBOREE 203
22 PRAIRIE FIRE 208
23 INDIAN WAR-CRY 213
24 INDIANS RIDE AWAY 220
25 SOLDIERS 225
26 GOING OUT 229
Book 3
Farmer Boy
01 SCHOOL DAYS 236
02 WINTER EVENING 241
03 WINTER NIGHT 248
04 SURPRISE 252
05 BIRTHDAY 256
``````
22 FALL OF THE YEAR 353
23 COBBLER 357
24 THE LITTLE BOBSLED 363
25 THRESHING 366
26 CHRISTMAS 369
27 WOOD-HAULING 376
28 MR. THOMPSON’S POCKETBOOK 382
29 FARMER BOY 390
Book 4
On the Banks of Plum Greek
01 THE DOOR IN THE GROUND 396
02 THE HOUSE IN THE GROUND 400
03 RUSHES AND FLAGS 405
04 DEEP WATER 407
05 STRANGE ANIMAL 410
06 WREATH OF ROSES 414
07 Ox ON THE ROOF 418
``````
29 THE DARKEST HOUR IS JUST BEFORE DAWN 505
30 GOING TO TOWN 511
31 SURPRISE 514
32 GRASSHOPPERS WALKING 520
33 WHEELS OF FIRE 524
34 MARKS ON THE SLATE 527
35 KEEPING HOUSE 530
36 PRAIRIE WINTER 535
37 THE LONG BLIZZARD 538
38 THE DAY OF GAMES 544
39 THE THIRD DAY 548
40 THE FOURTH DAY 549
41 CHRISTMAS EVE 555
Book 5
By the Shores of Silver Lake
01 UNEXPECTED VISITOR 560
02 GROWN UP 564
03 RIDING IN THE CARS 568
04 END OF THE RAILS 575
05 RAILROAD CAMP 579
06 THE BLACK PONIES 583
``````
25 PA’S BET 689
26 THE BUILDING BOOM 693
27 LIVING IN TOWN 697
28 MOVING DAY 704
29 THE SHANTY ON THE CLAIM 708
30 WHERE VIOLETS GROW 714
31 MOSQUITOES 719
32 EVENING SHADOWS FALL 721
Book 6
The Long Winter
01 MAKE HAY WHILE THE SUN SHINES 724
02 AN ERRAND TO TOWN 731
03 FALL OF THE YEAR 738
04 OCTOBER BLIZZARD 744
05 AFTER THE STORM 749
``````
27 FOR DAILY BREAD 878
28 FOUR DAYS’ BLIZZARD 890
29 THE LAST MILE 896
30 IT CAN’T BEAT US 904
31 WAITING FOR THE TRAIN 907
32 THE CHRISTMAS BARREL 912
33 CHRISTMAS IN MAY 915
Book 7
Little Town on the Prairie
01 SURPRISE 922
02 SPRINGTIME ON THE CLAIM 923
03 THE NECESSARY CAT 932
``````
21 THE MADCAP DAYS 1063
22 UNEXPECTED IN APRIL 1069
23 SCHOOLTIME BEGINS AGAIN 1072
24 THE SCHOOL EXHIBITION 1081
25 UNEXPECTED IN DECEMBER 1089
Book 8
These Happy Golden Years
01 LAURA LEAVES HOME 1096
02 FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL 1103
03 ONE WEEK 1109
04 SLEIGH BELLS 1115
``````
24 ALMANZO GOES AWAY 1234
25 THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS 1238
26 TEACHERS’ EXAMINATIONS 1244
27 SCHOOL DAYS END 1247
28 THE CREAM-COLORED HAT 1249
29 SUMMER STORM 1257
30 SUNSET ON THE HILL 1263
31 WEDDING PLANS 1267
32 “HASTE TO THE WEDDING” 1271
33 LITTLE GRAY HOME IN THE WEST 1275
Book 9
The First Four Years
01 THE FIRST YEAR 1284
02 THE SECOND YEAR 1311
03 THE THIRD YEAR 1322
04 A YEAR OF GRACE 1329
LITTLE HOUSE IN THE BIG WOODS
Once upon a time, sixty years ago, a little girl lived in the Big Woods of Wisconsin, in a little gray house made of logs.
The great, dark trees of the Big Woods stood all around the house, and beyond them were other trees and beyond them were more trees. As far as a man could go to the north in a day, or a week, or a whole month, there was nothing but woods. There were no houses. There were no roads. There were no people. There were only trees and the wild animals who had their homes among them.
Wolves lived in the Big Woods, and bears, and huge wild cats. Muskrats and mink and otter lived by the streams. Foxes had dens in the hills and deer roamed everywhere. To the east of the little log house, and to the west, there were miles upon miles of trees, and only a few little log houses scattered far apart in the edge of the Big Woods.
So far as the little girl could see, there was only the one little house where she lived with her father and mother, her sister Mary and baby sister Carrie. A wagon track ran before the house, turning and twisting out of sight in the woods where the wild animals lived, but the little girl did not know where it
went, nor what might be at the end of it.
The little girl was named Laura and she called her father, Pa, and her mother, Ma. In those days and in that place, children did not say Father and Mother, nor Mamma and Papa, as they do now.
At night, when Laura lay awake in the trundle bed, she listened and could not hear anything at all but the sound of the trees whispering together. Sometimes, far away in the night, a wolf howled. Then he came nearer, and howled again.
It was a scary sound. Laura knew that wolves would eat little girls. But she was safe inside the solid log walls. Her father’s gun hung over the door and good old Jack, the brindle bulldog, lay on guard before it. Her father would say:
“Go to sleep, Laura. Jack won’t let the wolves in.” So Laura snuggled under the covers of the trundle bed, close beside Mary, and went to sleep.
One night her father picked her up out of bed and carried her to the window so that she might see the wolves. There were two of them sitting in front of the house. They looked like shaggy dogs. They pointed their noses at the big, bright moon, and howled.
Jack paced up and down before the door, growling. The hair stood up along his back and he showed his sharp, fierce teeth to the wolves. They howled, but they could not get in. The house was a comfortable house. Upstairs there was a large attic, pleasant to play in when the rain drummed on the roof. Downstairs was the small bedroom, and the big room.
The bedroom had a window that closed with a wooden shutter. The big room had two windows with glass in the panes, and it had two doors, a front door and a back door. All around the house was a crooked rail fence, to keep the bears and the deer away.
In the yard in front of the house were two beautiful big oak trees. Every morning as soon as she was awake Laura ran to look out of the window, and one morning she saw in each of the big trees a dead deer hanging from a branch.
Pa had shot the deer the day before and Laura had been asleep when he brought them home at night and hung them high in the trees so the wolves could not get the meat.
That day Pa and Ma and Laura and Mary had fresh venison for dinner. It was so good that Laura wished they could eat it all. But most of the meat must be salted and smoked and packed away to be eaten in the winter.
For winter was coming. The days were shorter, and frost crawled up the window panes at night. Soon the snow would come. Then the log house would be almost buried in snowdrifts, and the lake and the streams would freeze. In the bitter cold weather Pa could not be sure of finding any wild game to shoot for meat.
The bears would be hidden away in their dens where they slept soundly all winter long. The squirrels would be curled in their nests in hollow trees, with their furry tails wrapped snugly around their noses. The deer and the rabbits would be shy and swift. Even if Pa could get a deer, it would be poor and thin, not fat and plump as deer are in the fall.
Pa might hunt alone all day in the bitter cold, in the Big Woods covered with snow, and come home at night with nothing for Ma and Mary and Laura to eat.
So as much food as possible must be stored away in the little house before winter came.
Pa skinned the deer carefully and salted and stretched the hides, for he would make soft leather of them. Then he cut up the meat, and sprinkled salt over the pieces as he laid them on a board.
Standing on end in the yard was a tall length cut from the trunk of a big hollow tree. Pa had driven nails inside as far as he could reach from each end. Then he stood it up, put a little roof over the top, and cut a little door on one side near the bottom. On the piece that he cut out he fastened leather hinges;
then he fitted it into place, and that was the little door, with the bark still on it.
After the deer meat had been salted several days, Pa cut a hole near the end of each piece and put a string through it. Laura watched him do this, and then she watched him hang the meat on the nails in the hollow log.
He reached up through the little door and hung meat on the nails, as far up as he could reach. Then he put a ladder against the log, climbed up to the top, moved the roof to one side, and reached down inside to hang meat on those nails.
Then Pa put the roof back again, climbed down the ladder, and said to Laura:
第四段评价: 这套书的上下册篇幅厚重,但阅读体验却十分流畅,几乎是一口气读完的。我特别欣赏它在展现“美国梦”的同时,并未回避拓荒生活中的残酷面——种族冲突、疾病横行以及与环境的激烈对抗。这种不加粉饰的真实感,让故事更具重量和说服力。我感觉自己仿佛被置于那些广袤无垠的土地上,切实体会到那种孤独感和对社区温暖的渴望。其中对于学校生活、社区聚会以及感恩节庆祝的描述,生动展现了早期定居点社会结构的形成过程,充满了民间智慧的闪光点。它不仅仅是一部传记性质的小说,更像是一部关于美国边疆开拓史的微观社会学报告,只不过是用最引人入胜的方式呈现了出来。读完后,我有一种强烈的冲动,想要去看看那些曾经的草原,想象劳拉奔跑的模样。
评分第一段评价: 捧读这套书,我仿佛被施了魔法,瞬间穿越回了那个没有高楼大厦,只有无垠草原和蓝天白云的美国中西部拓荒年代。书中的每一个场景都栩栩如生,每一个人物都鲜活得让人心疼。我跟着劳拉一家,体验了他们从小木屋到新定居点的艰辛跋涉,感受了那份与自然搏斗的勇气和对家庭的深深依恋。那段日子,物资匮乏,生活艰难,但字里行间流淌出的那种乐观和韧性,至今仍在我的脑海中回荡。作者用最朴实的语言,勾勒出了一个时代的面貌,让我深刻理解了“拓荒精神”的真正含义。我特别喜欢书中对细节的描绘,比如制作肥皂的流程、抵御严冬的准备,都写得细致入微,仿佛我就是那个在柴火旁帮忙的小女孩。读完后,我不仅收获了一段精彩的故事,更获得了一次精神上的洗礼。这本书的魅力在于,它不仅仅是讲述一个家族的故事,更是对那段美国历史最温柔也最真实的侧写。
评分第二段评价: 说实话,我一开始是被这书名吸引的,"小木屋"听起来就带着一种田园牧歌式的浪漫。然而,阅读过程中的体验远比我想象的要复杂和深刻得多。它绝不是那种轻松愉快的童话故事,而是充满挑战与挣扎的真实写照。我为玛丽的失明感到难过,为爸爸妈妈在困境中的坚持感到敬佩。这本书的叙事节奏处理得非常好,时而平静如水,描绘着草原日落的美景;时而波涛汹涌,展现着自然灾害和突发疾病带来的恐惧。它让我反思我们现代人对“舒适”的依赖,对比之下,那种从零开始建立生活的勇气显得尤为可贵。这本书对家庭价值观的探讨也极其到位,亲情的力量是他们跨越一切障碍的基石。每一次阅读,我都能从中挖掘出新的感悟,尤其是关于环境与人类关系的思考,真是值得反复品味。
评分第五段评价: 对我来说,阅读这套书是一次深入理解美国文化根源的心灵之旅。那些关于自给自足、依靠双手创造一切的理念,至今仍深深植根于美国精神之中。这本书的叙事结构非常巧妙,它将宏大的历史背景,浓缩在小女孩劳拉的日常视角中,使得沉重的历史议题变得可以亲近和理解。我特别喜欢书中对于自然环境的描写,那种对大自然的敬畏感,是现代人很难体会的。无论是暴风雪中的绝望,还是春天到来时的狂喜,都被作者细腻地捕捉了下来。它教会了我,真正的坚强并非外在的力量,而是内心深处对生活永不熄灭的希望和对家人的坚定守护。这是一部值得所有年龄段读者反复阅读的经典,每一次重温都会带来新的共鸣和力量。
评分第三段评价: 我通常不太喜欢这种“怀旧感”很强的作品,总觉得会有些沉闷,但这部作品完全打破了我的固有印象。它的语言风格非常独特,既有儿童文学的纯真视角,又不乏对成人世界复杂性的洞察。我尤其赞叹作者的观察力,她能将那些看似平凡的日常琐事,描绘得充满诗意和张力。比如,书中关于“囤积食物以备漫长冬季”的描写,那种对未来的不确定感,通过简洁的文字被无限放大,让人不寒而栗。更重要的是,这本书成功地塑造了一群有血有肉的形象,他们不是完美的英雄,而是有缺点、会犯错的普通人,正因如此,他们的胜利才显得如此真实和鼓舞人心。它提供了一个独特的窗口,让我得以窥见一个被现代社会逐渐遗忘的生活方式和生存哲学。
评分字迹清晰,但是感觉字体太密,小巧,方便携带,
评分包装精美,买的是英文原版,顺便温习一下英语,质量很好,物流也很给力
评分挺不错的书 小巧方便 纸质也不错 微微泛黄也有利于缓解视觉疲劳 正品没的说 买来备考 这次必胜
评分比我想象中的要小。。。内容还好吧!
评分一如既往的支持
评分这些书以前一直想买实体的来收藏,可是又太贵,趁着搞活动赶紧入手!原版的书本地书店不好买到,感谢京东!物流也超级快!会一如既往地支持哒!
评分很好的英文小说集,喜欢海明威的作品,所以买入。
评分最喜欢的侦探小说就是福尔摩斯了.
评分99选10件的时候买的,一直想买,这么便宜果断下单。京东买书还是有保证的,正版。
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