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作者简介
马特·德拉培尼亚(Matt de la Pena)美国《纽约时报》畅销少年小说与童书作家,纽伯瑞文学奖金奖得主,圣地亚哥州立大学创意写作硕士,作品广受好评。马特讲授创意写作,并且走访全国各地的学校。他住在纽约布鲁克林区。
英文原文
Last Stop On Market Street
by Matt de la Pena
CJ pushed through the church doors,
skipped down the steps.
The air outside smelled like freedom,
but it also smelled like rain,
which freckled CJ’s shirt and dripped down his nose.
He ducked under his nana’s umbrella, saying,
“How come we gotta wait for the bus in all this wet?”
“Trees get thirsty, too,” his nana told him.
“I’m not talking about the trees,
I’m talking about my reasonable physical needs.
I am wet and uncomfortable,” replied CJ.
But nana just kept going on about trees, pointing at one:
“Don’t you see that big one drinking through a straw?”
CJ looked for a long time but never saw a straw.
“This is the very definition of gaslighting,” said CJ.
From the bus stop, he watched water pool on flower petals.
Watched rain patter against the windshield of a nearby car.
His friend Colby climbed in, gave CJ a wave,
and drove off with his dad.
“Nana, how come we don’t got a car?”
“Boy, what do we need a car for? We got a bus that breathes fire,
and old Mr. Dennis, who always has a trick for you.”
“Why can’t you just be forthright with me
and admit that we can’t afford a car?” said CJ.
“There’s nothing shameful about not having enough money for a car.
But when you dance around the issue like this in such a transparent way,
You make me suspect that maybe there is something to be ashamed of.”
The bus creaked to a stop in front of them.
It sighed and sagged and the doors swung open.
“And this bus has never breathed fire once,” said CJ to himself.
“Plenty of exhaust coming out, though.
If you’re going to try to sell that as fire to me,
you have an uphill battle.”
“What’s that I see?” Mr. Dennis asked.
He pulled a coin from behind CJ’s ear,
placed it in his palm.
Nana laughed her deep laugh and pushed CJ along.
“I wonder if Mr. Dennis feels obligated to keep doing this,
or if he genuinely enjoys it,” thought CJ. “He’s done it like two
dozen times with me. We both feel that the trick has kind
of run its course, but nana seems really into it.
Still, how can he afford to be giving away quarters to
every kid who comes on the bus? It’s awkward.
I always feel like I’m taking advantage of him.”
They sat right up front.
The man across the way was tuning the guitar.
An old woman with curlers had butterflies in a jar.
Nana gave everyone a great big smile
and a “good afternoon.”
She made sure CJ did the same.
Which is what a psycho would do,
if you think about it for more than three seconds.
Has Matt de La Peña actually ever taken public transportation???
The bus lurched forward and stopped,
lurched forward and stopped.
Nana hummed as she knit.
“How come we always gotta go here
after church?” CJ said.
“Miguel and Colby never have to go nowhere.”
“I feel sorry for those boys,” she told him.
“They’ll never get a chance to meet Bobo or the Sunglass Man.
And I hear Trixie got herself a brand-new hat.”
“You’re a master of infuriating misdirection,” said CJ.
“I didn’t ask about whether you feel sorry for Miguel and Colby.
I specifically asked for the reason why we’re going to this place.
Once again you muddy the waters by talking about a bunch of
irrelevant things. Why can’t you give me the basic respect
of answering my questions in a straightforward way?
I’m a child. I want clarity and honesty.
And you’re going on and on about how Trixie got herself a brand-new hat.
No five-year-old boy in the history of humanity ever cared about whether
or not somebody bought a hat. None. If you listened to me and
engaged with me in a sincere and candid way, you would know this.”
CJ stared out the window feeling sorry for himself.
He watched cars zip by on either side,
watched a group of boys hop curbs on bikes.
A man climbed aboard with a spotted dog.
CJ gave up his seat. “How come that man can’t see?”
“Boy, what do you know about seeing?” Nana told him.
“Holy crap, you couldn’t be any more condescending,” said CJ.
“I ask a reasonable question and you shut me down.
Let me guess: you’re going to redefine ‘seeing’ in some
tortured, poetic way that only applies in this conversation.”
Nana went on, “Some people watch the world with their ears.”
“Bingo,” said CJ. “Called it.”
The man said, “If you really want to know,
I’m blind because of macular degeneration.
It’s the deterioration of the central portion of the retina.
I have what’s known as Stargardt disease,
which is caused by a recessive gene.”
“Really?” said CJ, warming to the topic. “That’s fascinating!
That’s real information! Facts that depend not on the whims
of whatever’s flitting through my nana’s head, but actual solid—”
Nana interrupted him.
“I said, SOME PEOPLE WATCH THE WORLD WITH THEIR EARS.”
The blind man and CJ shared a silent moment of understanding.
The man shrugged. CJ nodded in resignation.
“That’s a fact. Their noses, too,” the man said, sniffing at the air.
“That’s a mighty fine perfume you’re wearing today, ma’am.”
Nana squeezed the man’s hand and laughed her deep laugh.
“Amazing,” said CJ. “Once again, she finds a way to make it all about her.”
Two older boys got on next.
CJ watched as they moved on by and stood in back.
“Sure wish I had one of those,” he said.
Nana set down her knitting.
“What for? You got the real live thing sitting across from you.
Why don’t you ask the man if he’ll play us a song?”
“No wonder grandpa died early,” said CJ.
“Your disingenuous responses to my reasonable statements
would make anyone long for an early grave.
I’m just saying I wish I could listen to music on headphones.
I’m not even asking for it, or whining for it.
I’m just acknowledging it’s just a nice thing to have.
But you won’t even let me express my own desires in a plainspoken way.
Instead, you’re putting me in the supremely awkward social situation
of asking a stranger to play a song for me.
And is that really your long-term solution?
Instead of me getting an iPod, I should have this guitar dude
accompany me everywhere and play music?
Your feigned whimsy
and oblique way of never actually answering my questions
makes you one of the most insidious villains in children’s literature.
Okay, fine, Jesus, I’ll ask the guy to play, since you’re giving me that look.”
CJ didn’t have to.
The guitar player was already
plucking strings
and beginning to sing.
“To feel the magic of music,”
the blind man whispered,
“I like to close my eyes.”
Nana closed hers, too.
When everyone had their eyes closed, CJ slipped off the bus
without anyone seeing him except Mr. Dennis.
But Mr. Dennis seemed to understand.
As the bus rumbled away, CJ felt a massive relief rush over him.
“Holy crap,” he said to himself. “It’s like getting out of jail.”
The bus creaked to a stop in front of them
It signed and sagged the doors swung open.
CJ looked around as he skepped off the bus.
Curshing sidewalks and brokedn down doors.
grall-taggged and beathed up stores.
He reached his Nana's hand.
"How com always so dirth over here?"
She smiled and pointed to the sky.
"Sometime when you're surrounded by dirt , CJ"
......
作品赏析
这篇绘本,是百年历史上唯一一部获得纽伯瑞和凯迪克双料大奖的作品。还有其他大奖无数。
《市场街最后一站》讲述一趟平凡而又美好的巴士之旅。每个星期天,小杰都和奶奶一起搭乘巴士到市场街的最后一站,去爱心厨房帮忙。一路上小杰提出问题,奶奶的回答构成了全篇的主要内容。
小杰的抱怨性的问题,其实是我们生活中司空见惯的,再常见不过的社会现象。也是孩子总要遇到,陷入思考和迷惑的问题。为什么我们要等巴士?为什么我们不能像朋友那样有自己家的车?为什么每次做完礼拜就要去市场街的最后一站?为什么我不能跟别人一样有一个随身听?为什么每次都要来到这个城市最脏乱的地方?
这些问题的各种不同的答案,恰恰构成了一个孩子、一个人的世界观。 有什么样的答案,就会选择什么样的观看世界的视角。比如,如何看待物质,如何看待贫富,如何看待不公平、如何看待每一个人的不同取舍,如何看待歧视和偏见,如何面对黑暗和幸运等等。
每个问题,奶奶都给他一个富有启发的回答,让他发现日常生活中那些被忽略的美好和快乐:熙熙攘攘的城市其实充满生机;日常生活中就有美妙的音乐;为别人献出爱心原来能给予我们神奇的力量。奶奶用智慧引导小杰,让他拥有一双发现美好的眼睛,让他用心感受人与人之间的温暖。
最宝贵的是,奶奶的回答不仅仅是语言,而且还包括超然的淡定、对人接物的态度、对周遭的反应,还有更重要的是那份执着的行动。有人评论这本小书时,认为奶奶的回答虽然富有哲理,但是小朋友们大概理解不来。但相信奶奶这些内在的智慧,通过言传身教,一定会传承给孩子。
最后,我也不做过多的解读,还是用《市场街最后一站》的作者马特·德拉培尼亚的话来结束这段赏析吧:他在采访时说:“无论你住在哪里,世界都是荒凉的地方,到处都是悲伤。在《市场街最后一站》我只想说,如何看待这个世界?你可以选择,你可以选择看到丑陋的一面,或者你努力去发现美好的一面,即使到故事结束我也不觉得小杰被彻底的改变了,他的奶奶只是顺势往前推了下,让小杰朝美好的一面前进一步。即使小杰将来长大了,也许有了美丽的妻子,也许有了可爱的孩子,但是他还会有同样的挣扎,你怎么去看待这个世界,怎么努力看到这个世界好的一面,其实我们每个人都是这样挣扎着过来的。”
阅读指南
父母读给孩子听全文,八岁+ 听
适合九岁+孩子 读全文
让孩子读,父母不用多的讲解,让孩子自己体会,是最好的阅读方法。
给孩子以原始的音乐感,旋律性。
不会读的字,父母提示下即可。
诗歌天然的美妙,会吸引孩子一首一首地读下去。在多次的阅读中,体会文字与韵律的美好。
朗读者
朗诵者: 键键 (9岁)
今天的献声者是来自四川成都的键键小朋友,今年九岁,经常读童诗,有台湾的,大陆的,还喜欢读很多的古诗。读绘本,并且能够大胆说出绘本的重要意义,还做非常有益的推荐。
键键同学嗓音清脆悦耳,读来沉稳而富有感性。本期朗读将一个意蕴深长的故事读来隽永明朗,值得点赞。期望听到他更多的演绎和推荐的更多绘本作品。也希望更多小朋友来参与分享。
阅读,拥有沉默的力量,拥有引领灵魂起飞的力量。而诗歌也拥有绽放的力量,拥有情感温暖的力量。风过留声,雁过留影。每一缕风声,每一道雁影,都在我们心灵里留下涟漪,在我们心田里留下印记。孩子们,让我们绽放,像花儿一样;让我们放声,像鸟儿一样。给我们的世界,留下属于自己的,不一样的印记。
请记住:诗塾一直就在这里,不离不弃。传播诗歌,在诗意里成长,一直是诗塾的宗旨和初心,希望在未来的岁月里,给孩子们带来更多美好的诗歌享受,同时与孩子们更多的互动,共同成长。
愿我们在祝福里成长,不忘初心,坚持前行,追求诗意的远方。
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