阅读下列应用文及相关信息,并按照要求匹配信息。请在答题卡上将对应题号的相应选项字母涂黑。
首先,请阅读下列六本书籍的图片及相应简介:
A.
Everybody Loves Our Town:An Oral History of Grunge
By Mark Yarm
Crown Archetype
592 pp; $25.00
B.
The Psychopath Test: A Journey Through the Madness Industry
By Jon Ronson
Riverhead; 288 pp; $25.95
C.
The Red Market: On the Trail of the World’s Organ Brokers,Bone Thieves,
Blood Farmers, and Child Traffickers
By Scott Carney
Morrow; 272 pp; $25.99
D.
Car Guys vs. Bean Counters:The Battle for the Soul of American Business
By Bob Lutz
Portfolio; 256 pp; $26.95
E.
Henry Kissinger On China
By Henry Kissinger
Penguin Press; 608 pp; $36
F.
Biopunk:DIY Scientists Hack the Software of Life
By Marcus Wohlsen
Current; 256 pp; $25.95
以下是对这些书的描述。请将这些描述与书籍的图片及相应简介匹配起来。
According to Jon Ronson, the writer of the book, psychopaths are very charming, smart, easily bored and cruel. In the book, Ronson takes readers into the fascinating world of psychopaths by speaking to the experts and having amusing conversations with the psychopaths themselves.
This book is about a deeply funny story, as well as a deeply sad story—the great Nineties moment when a bunch of punk rock bands from Seattle accidentally blew up into the world’s biggest noise. The author gives the unique chronicle of how it all happened, and how it ended too soon. The book also makes readers appreciate how strange it was.
This is just one of the terrifying everyday tales of the body trade documented. It started out extremely well, with some fascinating stories about the trade in human body parts. It covers many different aspects of the “red market”, ranging from skeletons to blood, and even the giant business of collecting and selling human hair.
It’s been reported that the author has often attracted as much attention as his cars. The book is partly a biography covering a very short portion of the author’s own life—his second stint at General Motor(GM)—which recently ended after about a decade. However, it’s more than a biography. It is also a view on what went wrong with the US car industry and US industry in general.
This is a great book for anyone who has an interest in science, or wants to see advances in medicine at greater rates that we’ve seen them so far. If a reader has teenagers with interests in science, he should have them read this book. It will inspire them to broaden their horizons beyond the typical research lab.