单选题 As much as murder is a staple in mystery stories, so is love. Love may be a four-letter word, or the greatest of the trio of faith, hope, and love. It may appear in a mystery as the driving force behind the plot and the characters. Or it may appear as an aside in a sub-plot, a light spot in a heavy story. But it"s there. Even Valentine knew love was worth dying for.
An emotion this strong gets a lot of attention. Love has its own special day, St. Valentine"s Day. According to the legend, the Roman emperor Claudius II needed soldiers to fight for him in the far reaches of the Roman Empire. He thought married men would rather stay home than go to war for a couple of years, so he outlawed marriage and engagements. This did not stop people from falling in love. Valentine, a priest, secretly married many young couples. For this crime, he was arrested and executed on February 14.
St. Valentine"s Day was off to a rocky start. Love, secrecy, crime and death, love prevailed, and the day lost its seamy side. Valentine"s Day became a day to exchange expressions of love. Small children give each other paper hearts. Adults exchange flowers and chocolates. Everyone has an attack of the warm fuzzies.
Valentine"s Day was popular in Europe in the early 1800s as a day men brought gifts to the women they loved. Gradually the expectations grew higher, the gifts got bigger, and eventually the holiday collapsed under the weight of the bills.
It was revived when the custom of exchanging love letters and love cards replaced the mandatory gifts. A young man"s love was measured in how much time he spent making a card with paper, lace, feathers, beads, and fabric. If the young man wasn"t good with scissors and glue, the job could be hired out to an artist who made house calls.
Valentine"s Day grew more popular when machine-made cards became available, and people didn"t have to make their own. In England in 1840, the nation-wide Penny Post made it cheap for everyone to send Valentine cards. In the United States, national cheap postal rates were set in 1845, and valentines filled the mail.
"Roses are red, violets are blue" was a popular verse on Valentine cards. Other holidays are associated with particular flowers—the Christmas poinsettia, the Easter lily—but Valentine"s Day has no specific flower. Instead, it has colors—red, pink, and white. Red symbolizes warmth and feeling. White stands for purity. According to one romantic flower code, messages can be spelled out with flowers. Gardenias say "I love you secretly". Violets say "I return your love". Roses say "I love you passionately". Not surprisingly, the rose is now the top-seeded flower of love.
But love mostly goes wrong in mystery stories. Very badly wrong. Somebody done somebody wrong. Husbands, wives, and lovers kill each other. Or kill for each other. Stack the characters up in any kind of love triangle, and watch how the angles are knocked off. Love is unrequited, thwarted and scorned. Murders are motivated by real or imaginary love, or the lack of it. That famous novelist Ernest Hemingway said, "If two people love each other there can be no happy end to it". So it goes in the mystery. Justice may win, but love is often the loser.
In addition to plots driven by love, or the lack of it, there are sleuths who encounter love in the solving of the crime. The handsome or beautiful detective meets the suspect or the client. Their affair grows around, and in spite of, the murder. Think of the movies Casablanca and Chinatown. Barbara D"Amato offers a different twist on this theme in "Hard Feelings". The amateur sleuth meets a suspect or investigating officer and love smolders around the crime. Rose DeShaw"s "Love with the Proper Killer" is such a story.
In a series of novels, if the continuing character is living a full life, love enters the storyline somewhere. Dorothy L. Sayers" sleuth Lord Peter Wimsey fell in love with Harriet Vane while he sleuthed his way through a few books. Sherlock Holmes remained aloof, but Dr. Watson fell in love and married between impossible crimes. There were no such temptations for Hercule Poirot or Jane Marple, but Agatha Christie created Tuppence and Tommy Beresford as a detecting couple.
Real crimes are sometimes motivated by love, and are written about in true crime books. E.W. Count describes one such case in "Love is a Risk." "Married to a Murderer," by Alan Russell, follows the crime one step further.
Feeling an attack of the warm fuzzies? Do something sweet for someone you love. Then do something sweet for yourself. Settle back with soft music and savor the online mysteries of love and romance in the Valentine and Romance Mysteries sections of this site.
单选题 The word "staple" in Paragraph 1 means ______.
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】[解析] 本题的出题点在中心句处。第一段第一句话指出,正如谋杀是悬疑小说的staple一样,爱情也是如此。随后作者举例说明了爱情在悬疑小说中会以怎样的形式出现,比如作为主要情节或者人物背后的推动力量,或者作为一个沉重故事中起调节作用的次要、轻松的情节。所有这些都说明爱情和谋杀一样,都是悬疑小说中的一个重要因素、一类不可或缺的情节,由此可以推测出staple的含义,故选A。
单选题 Which of the following statements is NOT true about St. Valentine"s Day?
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】[解析] 本题的出题点在重要细节处。由第二段可知,情人节来自于一个传说。罗马皇帝Claudius二世需要士兵为罗马帝国而战,而他认为婚姻会使人不愿投入战斗,因此规定订婚和婚姻都是非法的,由此可以排除A;Valentine是一个牧师,他为很多年轻人秘密举行婚礼,因此于2月14日被捕并被杀害,而情人节就是他被杀害的日子,并以他的名字命名,由此可以排除B;由上述分析也可得知情人节最初是为了纪念牧师Valentine之死,并非为了纪念死去的爱人,故C为正确答案;从情人节的来历也可以看出它过去确实有着丑恶的一面,即爱情和婚姻在罗马皇帝Claudius二世统治时期是违法的,爱情和婚姻也因而与秘密、犯罪和死亡关联,故排除D。
单选题 The passage may be ______.
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】[解析] 本题考查主旨,应着眼于全文,尤其注意首尾段。题干询问本文是什么类的文章。最后一段作者说:“给自己一点甜蜜的奖励,来点轻音乐,欣赏本网站情人节与浪漫悬疑小说栏目中充满爱情与浪漫的悬疑小说吧。”可见本文是给网站一个有关此类小说的栏目写的序言,故选A。B“给一个系列丛书做的广告宣传”:文中并没有详细介绍某个系列丛书的优点等相关内容,因此排除;C“讨论情人节的来历”:这只是文章中涉及到的一部分内容,并不能概括整篇文章的主旨,故排除;D“给一些悬疑小说写的评论”:文章并没有就某些具体的悬疑小说的内容或者特点作评论,故排除。