绘本
平如美棠 豆瓣
所属 作品: 平如美棠
8.9 (7 个评分) 作者: 饶平如 广西师范大学出版社 2017 - 10
这是饶平如一生的故事。
他不是一个想打仗的人,但他还是义无反顾去打仗了。又因为和美棠在一起,他最终厌倦了战争,想要回家。
六十年的相守历尽坎坷,命运让他们长久分离。好容易最后又在一起了,美棠却身患重病且渐渐失去记忆。
平如推掉了所有工作,全身心照顾妻子。每天5点起床,给她梳头、洗脸、烧饭、做腹部透析,每天4次,消毒、口罩、接管、接倒腹水、还要打胰岛素、做纪录,他不放心别人帮。
美棠在病痛中渐渐不再配合,不时动手拔身上的管子。耳朵不好,看字也不清楚了,平如就画这画劝她不要拉管子,但画也不管用,只能晚上不睡一整夜看着她,毕竟岁数大了,不能每天如此,还是只能绑住她的手。“她叫‘别绑我’,我听到很难过,怎么办……很痛苦。”
美棠犯糊涂越来越严重,有一天称丈夫将自己的孙女藏了起来,不让她见,平如怎么说她都不信。他已经八十多岁,坐在地上,嚎啕大哭。
她看着他哭,像看不见一样。
他们一生坎坷,到了暮年才有一个安定的居所,但是老病相催,她却已经到了生命的尽头。
当美棠最终离开后,平如画下了他和美棠的故事,留下了关于她和他们的最美好的回忆。
柴静曾在节目中问老爷爷:“您已经90岁了。难道这么长时间,没有把这个东西磨平了,磨淡了?”老爷爷回答说:“磨平?怎么讲能磨的平呢?爱这个世界是很久的,这个是永远的事情。”
老爷爷还说:如果能够年光倒流的话,我宁愿再回到从前那一段比较艰苦的时代,两个人相守。
这是普通人自己的故事。
只有如此平凡而美好的东西才能拥有长久的感动力量!
欲望德黑兰 豆瓣
Broderies 所属 作品: 欲望德黑兰
8.0 (33 个评分) 作者: [伊朗]玛赞·莎塔碧 译者: 马爱农 文化发展出版社有限公司 2018 - 3
《欲望德黑兰》的故事发生在伊朗,主要内容为一群女性朋友茶余饭后聊天中的各种故事、奇谈,有发生在朋友、熟人身上的,也有从别人处听来的,都跟恋爱、婚姻问题有关,透过不同出身背景、不同经历的讲述人,折射出传统伊朗社会中,男女地位的变化和形形色色的婚恋观。
纳瑟·阿里先生的最后八天 豆瓣
Poulet aux prunes 所属 作品: 纳瑟·阿里先生的最后八天
8.1 (17 个评分) 作者: [伊朗]玛赞·莎塔碧 译者: 马爱农 文化发展出版社有限公司 2018 - 3
《纳瑟·阿里先生的最后八天》是一个凄美的爱情故事,讲述伊朗音乐家纳瑟人生最后8天的故事。纳瑟年轻时苦恋伊拉妮,无奈因为家庭原因无法结合,时过境迁,初恋情人于街头相逢,竟然无法相认。纳瑟深受打击,无法再面对惨淡的婚姻和现实,音乐梦想也不被妻子理解,他准备绝食等死。在临死之前,他回顾自己一生的遭遇,感慨人生遗憾已无法弥补。
追寻逝去的时光·第一卷 豆瓣 Goodreads
A la Recherche du Temps Perdu Tome 1 Du Côté de chez Swann 所属 作品: In Search of Lost Time
9.2 (28 个评分) 作者: [法] 斯泰凡·厄埃 编绘 / [法] 马塞尔·普鲁斯特 原作 译者: 周克希 湖南美术出版社 2018 - 1
《追忆逝水年华》图像小说
带你一口气读完普鲁斯特
周克希经典译本
程抱一推荐
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※编辑推荐※
◎ 打开普鲁斯特的正确方式是漫画:一口气读完《追寻逝去的时光》的机会来了。
◎ 周克希经典译本,法兰西院士程抱一推荐。
◎ 普鲁斯特是可以 被改编的吗?前半生出入社交名利场,后半生缠绵病榻。长期遭受慢性失眠症的折磨,他用这些漫漫长夜来追忆逝水年华。一部《追寻逝去的时光》,卷帙浩繁、文气绵密、句法精微,洋洋数百万言,写尽了爱的萌生和式微,写尽了名利场中的纸醉金迷、人情冷暖,是“一战”爆发前19世纪法国上流社会和半上流社会芸芸众生相的一幅长卷。这样一部复杂、丰饶,扑朔迷离的文本,进入难,出去更难:要如何将它改编成漫画?
◎ 斯泰凡·厄埃交了满分卷:他正职是广告公司总裁,并非科班出身的漫画家,却出于对这部小说的热爱,揽下“改编普鲁斯特”这个西西弗斯式的任务。他伏案十年,将绵密文字抽丝拨茧,一一落实到图像叙事,水落石出,脉络显现,不失其精髓,就好比“将一部巨型交响乐改写成一首钢琴协奏曲”。
◎ 于极简处见繁华:厄埃的改编野心勃勃却又虚怀若谷,满怀敬意。对这部小说了若指掌的他,文本取舍极具匠心,不取则已,取则无一字增删,画风传承延续《丁丁历险记》经典“清线派”风格,十九世纪法国风土人情跃然纸上。
◎ 人生太短,普鲁斯特太长:普鲁斯特的“难读”与他的名气齐名。将文本图像化的尝试,可看作将普鲁斯特“民主化”的尝试,为读者指明了一条进入普鲁斯特文本的捷径。不管是将小说烂熟于心的人,徘徊门外犹豫不前的人,还是从来没有机会读完过它的人:这部漫画都会为你打开一扇通往普鲁斯特天地的大门。
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※内容简介※
这部漫画是在马塞尔·普鲁斯特的著名小说《追寻逝去的时光》基础上改编而成,对话与旁白均摘自小说原文,无一字增删。原著小说共分七卷,讲了叙述者的童年记忆、出入上流社会的经历、友谊、爱情和回忆。它讲了上流社会和半上流社会的浮华和众生相,精确地描述了“一战”前夕法国的社会、经济与阶层。
漫画的第一卷乃是根据小说的第一卷《去斯万家那边》改编而成,讲述了作者对童年居所贡布雷和家庭密友斯万先生的记忆,以及斯万和奥黛特之间的爱情的萌发和式微。
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※媒体推荐※
文字与画面相得益彰,清线派画风继承了《丁丁历险记》传统,要改编普鲁斯特非此则不能妥。普鲁斯特被托付到厄埃手中,是一件多么幸运的事情啊:他的改编尺度,增一分则太过,减一分则不足,真是“看似寻常最奇崛,成如容易却艰辛”。当厄埃悄然退居幕后的时候,普鲁斯特也就现身了。
—— 《费加罗报》
“……我享受了一番妥帖达意,甚至巧遇故知的情趣;庆幸中国读者从此得以进入普鲁斯特天地,尽情徜徉其间矣!”
——法兰西学院院士程抱一(François Cheng)推荐
普鲁斯特的文体,自有一种独特的美。那些看似‘臃肿冗长’的长句,在他笔下不仅是必要的,而且是异常精彩的。因为他确实有那么些纷至沓来、极为丰赡的思想要表达,确实有那么些错综复杂、相当微妙的关系和因由要交待,而这一切,他又是写得那么从容,那么美妙……犹如一棵树分出好些枝桠,枝桠上长出许多枝条,枝条上又结出繁茂的叶片和花朵。
——本书译者周克希
感谢普鲁斯特和厄埃,让我们得以一睹昔日法兰西之美:家庭聚餐、玄关处铺地的彩砖、老式木地板、花园铁门挂的铃铛、桌铃……无比妥帖的乡愁。
—— 法国亚马逊读者评论
Ethel & Ernest 豆瓣
所属 作品: 伦敦一家人
作者: Raymond Briggs Jonathan Cape 1998 - 9
The story of Raymond Briggs's parents' marriage, from their first, chance encounter to their deaths. Told in Briggs's familiar strip-cartoon format, with nothing embroidered or altered, the book is also a social history of a kind, embracing such events as World War II and the advent of television.
蓬蓬头彼得 豆瓣
所属 作品: 蓬蓬头彼得
作者: (德)海因里希·霍夫曼 译者: 张鲁川 中国青年出版社 2012 - 4
《蓬蓬头彼得》是德国最家喻户晓的经典儿童绘本,1844年,德国心理医生海因里希·霍夫曼博士因为在书店找不到送给儿子的童书作为礼物,决定亲自撰文并绘图,出版后一发不可收拾,第一年就数次再版。本书故事朗朗上口,到现在为止,已经被翻译成32种语言,被全世界100多个国家的孩子们阅读,比“三毛”更加经典。这是一本兼具趣味性和教育性的好书,解决孩子让人头疼但无计可施的一些小毛病,而且效果非常棒,小朋友们开始爱卫生、安安静静地吃饭、不挑食、不玩火、不再动来动去、不随便摸陌生的小动物、变得温文尔雅…… 滑稽的形象、搞笑的小故事与好习惯的养成融为一体,成为全世界小朋友甚至很多成年人的心头之爱。
髒亂房間大作戰 豆瓣
片づけられない女のためのこんどこそ!片づける技術 所属 作品: 髒亂房間大作戰
作者: 池田曉子 译者: 郭玉梅 八方出版股份有限公司 2008 - 7
大家好,我是池田曉子,是一位職業插畫家。獨自住在將近八坪的套房(26平方公尺),由於是住家兼工作室,所以房間裡可說是髒‧亂‧到‧極‧點,甚至髒亂到根本不敢讓親朋好友看到。前五年的時候,我偶爾還會嘗試動手整理,沒想到最後是一次比一次更髒更亂,我實在不願意讓別人覺得……
有一個衣衫不整、其貌不揚的「腐爛女」住在這個世界超級無敵髒亂的屋子裡,所以,我開始思考:如果我再繼續髒亂下去的話,我的人生恐怕將會一塌糊塗,如果我再不好好整理房間的話,我的人生也會跟著一片黑暗。所以,我把全部的改造過程寫成血淚交織的奮鬥史,希望能夠與各位讀者共同分享、勉勵嚕!
The Invention of Hugo Cabret 豆瓣
所属 作品: 造梦的雨果
作者: Brian Selznick Scholastic Press 2007 - 1
在线阅读本书
Hugo Cabret,这个住在巴黎火车站巨墙内的孤儿,靠着社会救济金和行窃,勉强过日。但他看似简陋而清苦的生活,其实却隐藏了一个极大的秘密。但这个秘密,却无意间被火车站的玩具零售商和一个热爱书籍的小女孩发现了。Hugo该怎么做,才能不让他隐藏的身份被揭露呢?而他的真实身份又是什么呢?这本New York Times童书最佳销售排行榜上,连续十周让哈利波特也敬陪末座的魔幻故事,结合了绘本和小说的两种特性,超过三百页的连续插画,让整本书看起来像是部小型的动画电影,生动地将这个少年的魔幻人生呈现出来。
Book Description
Orphan, clock keeper, and thief, Hugo lives in the walls of a busy Paris train station, where his survival depends on secrets and anonymity. But when his world suddenly interlocks with an eccentric, bookish girl and a bitter old man who runs a toy booth in the station, Hugo's undercover life, and his most precious secret, are put in jeopardy. A cryptic drawing, a treasured notebook, a stolen key, a mechanical man, and a hidden message from Hugo's dead father form the backbone of this intricate, tender, and spellbinding mystery.
Amazon.com Exclusive
A Letter from Brian Selznick
Dear readers,
When I was a kid, two of my favorite books were by an amazing man named Remy Charlip. Fortunately and Thirteen fascinated me in part because, in both books, the very act of turning the pages plays a pivotal role in telling the story. Each turn reveals something new in a way that builds on the image on the previous page. Now that I’m an illustrator myself, I’ve often thought about this dramatic storytelling device and all of its creative possibilities.
My new book, The Invention of Hugo Cabret, is a 550 page novel in words and pictures. But unlike most novels, the images in my new book don't just illustrate the story; they help tell it. I've used the lessons I learned from Remy Charlip and other masters of the picture book to create something that is not a exactly a novel, not quite a picture book, not really a graphic novel, or a flip book or a movie, but a combination of all these things.
I began thinking about this book ten years ago after seeing some of the magical films of Georges Méliès, the father of science-fiction movies. But it wasn’t until I read a book called Edison's Eve: The Quest for Mechanical Life by Gaby Woods that my story began to come into focus. I discovered that Méliès had a collection of mechanical, wind-up figures (called automata) that were donated to a museum, but which were later destroyed and thrown away. Instantly, I imagined a boy discovering these broken, rusty machines in the garbage, stealing one and attempting to fix it. At that moment, Hugo Cabret was born.
A few years ago, I had the honor of meeting Remy Charlip, and I'm proud to say that we've become friends. Last December he was asking me what I was working on, and as I was describing this book to him, I realized that Remy looks exactly like Georges Méliès. I excitedly asked him to pose as the character in my book, and fortunately, he said yes. So every time you see Méliès in The Invention of Hugo Cabret, the person you are really looking at is my dear friend Remy Charlip, who continues to inspire everyone who has the great pleasure of knowing him or seeing his work.
Paris in the 1930's, a thief, a broken machine, a strange girl, a mean old man, and the secrets that tie them all together... Welcome to The Invention of Hugo Cabret.
Yours,
Brian Selznick
Amazon.com Exclusive
Brian Selznick on a "Deleted Scene" from The Invention of Hugo Cabret
This is a finished drawing that I had to cut from The Invention of Hugo Cabret. I was still rewriting the book when I had to begin the final art. There was originally a scene in the story where this character, Etienne, is working in a camera shop. On one of my research trips to Paris I spent an entire day visiting old camera shops and photographing cameras from the 1930's and earlier, as well as the facades of the shops themselves. I researched original French camera posters and made sure that the counter and the shelves were accurate to the time period. I did all the drawings in the book at 1/4 scale, so they were very small and I often had to use a magnifying glass to help me see what I was drawing. After I finished this drawing I continued to rewrite, and for various reasons I realized that I needed to move this scene from the camera shop to the French Film Academy, which meant that I had to cut this picture. I tried really hard to find ANOTHER moment when I could have Etienne in a camera shop, but, as painful as it was, I knew the picture had to go. I'm glad to see it up on the Amazon website because otherwise no one would have ever seen all those tiny cameras I researched and drew so carefully!
--Brian Selznick
Illustrations

From Publishers Weekly
Here is a true masterpiece—an artful blending of narrative, illustration and cinematic technique, for a story as tantalizing as it is touching.Twelve-year-old orphan Hugo lives in the walls of a Paris train station at the turn of the 20th century, where he tends to the clocks and filches what he needs to survive. Hugo's recently deceased father, a clockmaker, worked in a museum where he discovered an automaton: a human-like figure seated at a desk, pen in hand, as if ready to deliver a message. After his father showed Hugo the robot, the boy became just as obsessed with getting the automaton to function as his father had been, and the man gave his son one of the notebooks he used to record the automaton's inner workings. The plot grows as intricate as the robot's gears and mechanisms [...] To Selznick's credit, the coincidences all feel carefully orchestrated; epiphany after epiphany occurs before the book comes to its sumptuous, glorious end. Selznick hints at the toymaker's hidden identity [...] through impressive use of meticulous charcoal drawings that grow or shrink against black backdrops, in pages-long sequences. They display the same item in increasingly tight focus or pan across scenes the way a camera might. The plot ultimately has much to do with the history of the movies, and Selznick's genius lies in his expert use of such a visual style to spotlight the role of this highly visual media. A standout achievement. Ages 9-12. (Mar.)
From School Library Journal
Grade 4–9—With characteristic intelligence, exquisite images, and a breathtaking design, Selznick shatters conventions related to the art of bookmaking in this magical mystery set in 1930s Paris. He employs wordless sequential pictures and distinct pages of text to let the cinematic story unfold, and the artwork, rendered in pencil and bordered in black, contains elements of a flip book, a graphic novel, and film. It opens with a small square depicting a full moon centered on a black spread. As readers flip the pages, the image grows and the moon recedes. A boy on the run slips through a grate to take refuge inside the walls of a train station—home for this orphaned, apprentice clock keeper. As Hugo seeks to accomplish his mission, his life intersects with a cantankerous toyshop owner and a feisty girl who won't be ignored. Each character possesses secrets and something of great value to the other. With deft foreshadowing, sensitively wrought characters, and heart-pounding suspense, the author engineers the elements of his complex plot: speeding trains, clocks, footsteps, dreams, and movies—especially those by Georges Méliès, the French pioneer of science-fiction cinema. Movie stills are cleverly interspersed. Selznick's art ranges from evocative, shadowy spreads of Parisian streets to penetrating character close-ups. Leaving much to ponder about loss, time, family, and the creative impulse, the book closes with a waning moon, a diminishing square, and informative credits. This is a masterful narrative that readers can literally manipulate.
—Wendy Lukehart, Washington DC Public Library
From Booklist
Selznick's "novel in words and pictures," an intriguing mystery set in 1930s Paris about an orphan, a salvaged clockwork invention, and a celebrated filmmaker, resuscitates an anemic genre--the illustrated novel--and takes it to a whole new level. The result is somewhat similar to a graphic novel, but experiencing its mix of silvery pencil drawings and narrative interludes is ultimately more akin to watching a silent film. Indeed, movies and the wonder they inspire, "like seeing dreams in the middle of the day," are central to the story, and Selznick expresses an obvious passion for cinema in ways both visual (successive pictures, set against black frames as if projected on a darkened screen, mimic slow zooms and dramatic cuts) and thematic (the convoluted plot involves director Georges M'eli'es, particularly his fanciful 1902 masterpiece, A Trip to the Moon .) This hybrid creation, which also includes movie stills and archival photographs, is surprising and often lovely, but the orphan's story is overshadowed by the book's artistic and historical concerns (the heady extent of which are revealed in concluding notes about Selznick's inspirations, from the Lumi'ere brothers to Fran'eois Truffaut). Nonetheless, bookmaking this ambitious demands and deserves attention--which it will surely receive from children attracted by a novel in which a complex narrative is equally advanced by things both read and seen.
Jennifer Mattson
From AudioFile
Inside a Paris train station in 1932, a small boy named Hugo Cabret secretly keeps all the clocks running. Like the workings of a clock, the parts of this intriguing story interlock, and the audio program is a marvel in itself. Jeff Woodman narrates Hugo's story, which introduces listeners to an automaton, a mechanical figure that writes and draws, and the early science fiction films of Georges M?li?s. Woodman clearly captures Hugo and his friends as they try to discover the secrets of an old man. Sound sequences are placed within the narrative where in the print edition of the book a series of illustrations occurs. A bonus DVD accompanies the set, and it's a dynamic "extra." The disc contains not just a filmed interview with Selznick, in which he talks about his writing and illustration process, but also images of the actual illustrations. This wholly original integration of audio narration, soundscapes, illustration, and author discussion is an experience listeners of all ages should not miss. Discovering how the intricate puzzle of elements fits together like clockwork will provide repeated listenings to figure out. R.F.W. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award
Book Dimension
length: (cm)21.3                 width:(cm)14.2
雨果 (2011) 维基数据 IMDb 豆瓣 TMDB Min reol
Hugo
7.6 (758 个评分) 导演: 马丁·斯科塞斯 演员: 阿萨·巴特菲尔德 / 科洛·莫瑞兹
其它标题: Hugo / 雨果的巴黎奇幻历险(港)
小男孩雨果(阿沙·巴特菲尔德 Asa Butterfield 饰)天生机械控。他寄宿巴黎火车站钟楼,偶尔会去玩具店偷些零件,用来修补父亲(裘德·洛 Jude Law 饰)留下的机器人。一次行窃,他被店主乔治•梅里埃(本·金斯利 Ben Kingsley 饰)当场抓获,因 忌惮带猎狗的巡警(萨莎·拜伦·科恩 Sacha Baron Cohen 饰)只得就范。乔治拿走了雨果父亲的遗物——一本机械手册,令他心急如焚,他尾随至乔治家中,结识了养女伊莎贝拉(科洛·莫瑞兹 Chloë Moretz 饰),他恳求她帮自己保住手册。而伊莎贝拉则觉得此事蹊跷,于是两人结伴探秘。修好的机器人作画的落款却显示乔治的名字,让他们疑心顿起。终于他们发现了乔治家中装满画作的神秘柜子,并在图书馆的电影书籍中发现了乔治的身世。一位知情人的显身,让他们的奇幻冒险更添神秘……
本片根据布莱恩•瑟兹尼克的同名小说改编,是马丁•斯科塞斯的首部3D力作。
我在伊朗长大4 豆瓣
所属 作品: 我在伊朗长大4
9.4 (22 个评分) 作者: [伊朗] 玛赞·莎塔碧 译者: 马爱农 / 左涛 生活·读书·新知三联书店 2006 - 4
《回家》是《我在伊朗长大》系列的完結篇。
Marjane 回到了她的家乡伊朗。在几年间,伊朗的一切全变了,宗教对女性的道德规范更厉害。受过西方思想影响的 Marjane如何适应比以往更严厉的教条? 她会走一条怎样的道路?
我在伊朗长大3 豆瓣
所属 作品: 我在伊朗长大3
9.5 (20 个评分) 作者: [伊朗] 玛赞·莎塔碧 译者: 马爱农 / 左涛 生活·读书·新知三联书店 2006 - 4
在《我在伊朗长大3》中, Marjane开始了她在维也纳的生活。她住在奥地利由修女开设的宿舍中,与室友言语不通;孤独的她设法融入学校生活,甚至作出崩妹打扮……
一方面担心战乱的祖国,另一方面要面对爱情烦恼与被误解的痛苦,反叛的Marjane如何面对种种冲击?
我在伊朗长大2 豆瓣
所属 作品: 我在伊朗长大2
9.4 (25 个评分) 作者: [伊朗] 玛赞·莎塔碧 译者: 马爱农 / 左涛 生活·读书·新知三联 2006 - 4
Marjane本是一个对革命有着浪漫情怀的小女孩,后来她经历了身边熟识的亲人和朋友在革命与战争中死亡,以及原教旨主义势力的扩张,踏入青春期的她开始变得反叛。于是,父母为了她的安全和快乐,在的故事后段,只有十四岁的Marjane被送到维也纳读书。
我在伊朗长大1 豆瓣
所属 作品: 我在伊朗长大1
9.4 (32 个评分) 作者: [伊朗] 玛赞·莎塔碧 译者: 马爱农 / 左涛 生活·读书·新知三联 2006 - 4
《我在伊朗长大》全系列共四册,在法国推出时大获好评,被译成十多种文字,并获得了包括2004年德国法兰克福书展“最佳漫画奖”等多个漫画书大奖。
这套连环图述说了一个伊朗小女孩在伊斯兰革命时期的成长故事。这个小女孩经历了国王被推翻、伊斯兰革命、与伊拉克战争等国家大事。作者玛嘉·莎塔碧述说的正是她本人的成长经验。
作者运用简单的线条和黑白对比带出这个震撼人心的故事。大量黑色的运用令画面充满力量。随着主角Marji的成长,读者可以深入地了解伊朗的历史、政治和文化。