Dr Zhivago B1402
Transcription
Dr Zhivago B1402
Teacher’s notes LEVEL 5 B1402 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme Dr Zhivago Boris Pasternak About the author Born in Moscow in 1890, Boris Pasternak was brought up in a cultured Jewish household. He at first intended to be a musician, before deciding to study philosophy at Moscow University. During the First World War he worked in a chemical factory, and after the Revolution he worked for the Soviet commissariat of education. His first volume of poetry was published in 1913; with the publication of his third volume, My Sister, Life, in 1922, he was recognised as a major new lyrical voice. However, Pasternak’s work was regarded as going against the Communist Party line, and from 1933 to 1943 he was unable to publish anything, and survived by translating great European writers. Pasternak’s lifework was Dr Zhivago, which he submitted to a leading Moscow periodical in 1956. It was rejected as being politically unsound. It was published in Italy in 1957 and Pasternak was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature a year later. However, this led to persecution in his own country, and he was unable to accept the award. He died in 1960, aged seventy, suffering from cancer and heart trouble. It was not until 1987 that Dr Zhivago was finally published in Russia, and the recognition that was Pasternak’s due was finally granted him. Summary Dr Zhivago tells the story of five young people as they live through the Russian Revolution, when the Russian monarchy is overthrown and the world’s first Communist state is established. There is Yury Zhivago, brilliant and idealistic doctor, poet and writer; Tonya, who is a lawyer and Yury’s wife; Lara, a nurse; her soldier husband, Pasha, who is an inspired leader of men; and Misha, c Pearson Education Limited 2008 philosopher and friend to Yury. Yury Zhivago is the true hero of this epic story – we see the turbulence and danger of the Revolution and the First World War through his compassionate eyes. Yury, while married to Tonya, falls deeply in love with Lara, a woman of mystery and magnetism. Both Yury and Lara love their families. But their love for one another seems destined. They meet, are parted by the ravages of war, meet again and are parted once more. Although the end of the story may seem tragic, it is not, for their love transcends death itself. Chapter 1: It is 1901. Yury Zhivago is a young boy standing at his mother’s funeral. Having been abandoned by his father long before, he is taken up by Uncle Kolya, a citizen concerned with the political ideas of the time. Chapter 2: Yury’s father is on a train talking to Mr Gordon, a lawyer about his financial troubles. He jumps off and kills himself. Uncle Kolya sends Yury to live in Moscow with the rich Gromekos. Chapter 3: Lara Guishar’s mother owns a struggling shop and is under the influence of the evil Komarovsky, a friend of her late huband’s. He introduces her to a world of luxury and she belongs to him. Her best friend Pasha is secretly in love with her. The situation in Moscow worsens. Chapter 4: During one of the Gromekos’ musical parties, a violinist is called back home to see a dying friend: Lara’s mother has tried to kill herself. Yury and her friend Misha see Lara and Komarovsky. Misha recognises him as the man who was on the train with Yury’s father. Chapter 5: Lara shoots Komarovsky at a party but misses. He realises she has the power to hurt him but does not want to risk his reputation by being linked to her. He decides to find her a place to live but he will stay away from her. Yury recognises Lara. Tonya is devastated by her mother’s death. Chapter 6: Yury marries Tonya. He works as a doctor in a hospital in Moscow. They have a son. Lara marries Pasha and they move out of Moscow to become teachers. They have a daughter. Their relationship is complicated, and so he joins the army. Chapter 7: Yury is working at one of the army’s hospitals. When Misha visits, they discuss the horrors of the new regime and the war. They make plans to leave together but the Germans attack and Yury is seriously wounded. Dr Zhivago - Teacher’s notes of 5 Teacher’s notes LEVEL 5 B1402 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme Dr Zhivago Chapter 8: Lara learns about Pasha’s death. Yury and Lara become friends. After three years, he manages to get back to his wife and son in Moscow, where the 1917 Revolution has started, and a difficult winter is coming. Yury helps a man who was robbed and who later protects him and his family. love stories. The author, Boris Pasternak, was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1958. By the end of that year, it had been translated into eighteen languages. The film Doctor Zhivago (1965) was also hugely successful. Chapter 9: On a long trip by train to the family estate in Varykino through destroyed villages, Yury is captured and released by Commissar Strelnikov, who is really Pasha. On arrival, they find the former employees in the house but are allowed some rooms. The son is an important Bolshevik leader named Liberius. Dr Zhivago is in the tradition of the great Russian novels of the nineteenth century. It has the epic sweep of a novel such as War and Peace, moving through space and time with the agility and assurance of a master novelist. The novel starts in Moscow in 1901, and ends, in Moscow again, in 1943. Of the five main characters, some are born to wealth, others are poor. The vicissitudes of war and revolution mean that each of the five characters comes to learn that there is no security. To read Dr Zhivago is like taking a ride on a roller coaster: if a character at last seems to have found a haven in which to live peacefully with his family, fate then intervenes, in the shape of war, poverty, or some such evil, and chaos ensues once more. Thus, Pasternak conveys to the reader a real sense of what it was like to live at the time of the Russian Revolution, a sense of the utter insecurity of those who lived through it, even if they may have agreed with its principles. Chapter 10: Yury begins writing and meets Lara on his frequent trips to the library in Yuryatin. He is determined to stop seeing her and tell Tonya the truth. He is kidnapped by Liberius’s men. Chapter 11: After two years with the Reds, Yury escapes through Siberia. Ill and exhausted, he gets to Lara’s house. She looks after him. Yury gets a letter from Tonya: she has baby girl and is leaving Russia. Lara leaves with Komarovsky to avoid danger. Strelnikov shoots himself and Yury returns to Moscow. Chapter 12: Yury abandons medicine and writes in solitude until a former servant helps him and his daughter, Marina, becomes Yury’s new love. Chapter 13: Marina and Yury have two children. Misha tells Yury to contact Tonya, who is in Paris, so that he can marry Marina, to comply with the new rules and to resume work. His half brother Yevgraf helps him rebuild his life away from his family. On his way to work at the hospital, Yury dies of a heart attack. Lara arrives to say goodbye to Yury and search for their daughter who was raised by strangers in Moscow. She is never seen again. Chapter 14: Yevgraf finds Tanya, the lost child. Lara gave her up because Komarovsky did not want children around. Misha becomes an officer during the Second World War and enjoys reading Yury’s books. The original text Published in 1957, the story is widely considered one of the finest novels of the twentieth century. It not only gives one of the best descriptions of the early days of the Russian Revolution, it is also one of the world’s greatest c Pearson Education Limited 2008 Background and themes Following another tradition of the nineteenth century Russian novel, Pasternak makes his hero, Dr Zhivago, a good and idealistic man, committed to doing whatever he can to help his people. Besides being a doctor, Zhivago is also a poet and a writer, and one has the sense that Pasternak put a lot of himself, his own hopes and ideas, into this good-hearted doctor. Again, as is typical in a Russian novel, Zhivago engages in philosophical and political discussions with his friends, so that the reader is able to appreciate the kinds of ideas that were prevalent among intellectuals at that time. It is against this background that we must view Yury Zhivago’s love for Lara. Pasternak brilliantly portrays for us a loving family man utterly torn in two – and eventually destroyed – by his love for another woman. Pasternak was a great poet, and it is in the love story of Yury and Lara that his lyricism shines most brightly. It is here that his novel parts company with the Russian novelists of the previous century, for Dr Zhivago has a lyrical and poetic energy of its own. Readers will finish Dr Zhivago feeling saddened but greatly enriched, with a deeper understanding of life. Dr Zhivago - Teacher’s notes of 5 Teacher’s notes LEVEL 5 B1402 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme Dr Zhivago Discussion activities Before reading 1 Pair work: Put students in pairs. Ask them to say what they know about the Russian Revolution that brought Communism into the world. Then elicit information from students, making notes on the board. Then students read the Historical Notes on page vi. Ask them this question: Why are these dates important in the Russian Revolution? (a) 1905 (b) February 1917 (c) July 1917 (d) October 1917 2 Discuss: Ask students to read the Introduction and the Historical Notes on page vi. Then answer these questions about these sentences in the Introduction. (a) ‘… the lives of four young people are interrupted by the extraordinary events of the Russions Revolution.’ Why were these events so extraordinary? (b) ‘Each of the four … faces the endless problems caused by the Revolution.’ What kind of problems do you think the Revolution caused them or might cause them? Chapters 1–3 While reading 3 Discuss: (after reading Chapter 1) Yury was brought up by Uncle Kolya, who was more than a father figure to him. Ask students to discuss possible answers to this question: How do you think his Uncle might influence his future life? 4 Pair work: (page 2) Ask students in pairs to explain the relationship between Yury and his father with the information available so far. 5 Guess: (page 3) We learn that Yury’s father has committed suicide. Ask students to discuss what kind of problems could have made him make such a tragic decision based on the brief information readers have. 6 Role play: (page 3) Soon after they returned from the trip to Duplyanka, Uncle Kolya sent Yury to Moscow to live with some distant relatives, the Gromekos. Ask students in pairs to role play the conversation between Yury and his Uncle when he breaks the news to the boy. After reading 7 Group work: Divide the class into groups of three. Assign a character to each: Yury, Lara and Pasha. Ask each group to gather information about their character’s family background, their physical description, personality, dreams and hopes, and friends. Then form new groups of three students, c Pearson Education Limited 2008 each coming from a different original group and with information about a different character. In the new group, they compare the life of the three people in the story so far. Then they share their views. Chapters 4–5 Before reading 8 Guess: The main characters in the story have been introduced. Ask students to guess what will happen between them. While reading 9 Role play: (page 12) Lara’s brother, Rodya, is in serious trouble: he must pay a gambling debt. Lara, upset and embarrassed, asks Nadya’s father for help. Ask students to role play this conversation in pairs. 10 Group work: (page 13) On her deathbed, Anna tells Yury and Tonya to get married. Divide students into two groups and ask them to think of arguments in favour and against Anna’s wish. You can use these questions to guide them: Was this the right thing to do? Should she impose such a heavy burden on these young people? Or was she aware of the feelings for each other that they were not aware of themselves? What would happen if Yury or Tonya did not want to get married? 11 Role play: (page 14) Ask students to imagine they are guests at the Sventitskys’ Christmas party. What are they wearing? What is the atmosphere like at the party? What is the buffet like? Ask students to act out a conversation between them in pairs or small groups. 12 Pair work: (page 14) Yury sees Lara for the second time at the party. Ask students to compare this time with the previous one, at her place. How does Yury feel about her now? After reading 13 Group work: Put students in groups of four. Each student must write a short paragraph describing a character’s thoughts at a certain point in the story so far. They read their paragraph aloud and the rest of the group say who the character is and what the situation is. Chapters 6–8 Before reading 14 Discuss: Ask students how much they know about the First World War. How long did it last? Who did Russia fight against? How did the war end for Russia? While reading 15 Pair work: (page 17) Ask students in pairs to compare the marriage of Yury and Tonya to that of Pasha and Lara. Then form new pairs to see whether they have considered the same ideas. Dr Zhivago - Teacher’s notes of 5 Teacher’s notes LEVEL 5 B1402 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme Dr Zhivago 16 Discuss: (page 24) Yury asks Lara: ‘Why can’t an adult man talk to an adult woman without everyone thinking they are more than friends?’ Ask students to discuss whether that is still true in their communities and whether friendship between a man and a woman is possible / desirable / more complicated than friendship with people of the same sex. 17 Group work: (page 30) Ask students to work in small groups. Ask them to explain the analogy in the novel: ‘… there was something similar between the political events and the weather.’ Tell students that the weather mirroring events is a frequent cinematographic technique: rain signals a break-up in the flow of events and the course of the story is altered. On the contrary, a sunny day is a positive sign. Can this also happen in real life? 18 Discuss: (page 32) Yury says ‘This is a great idea but I doubt that it can work.’ What do you think are Yury’s concerns about the future? Then read until the end of the chapter and decide if their suppositions were right. After reading 19 Role play: Ask student to work in pairs and imagine it is the winter of 1917–18. Ask them to act a conversation between Yury and Tonya as they talk about the political situation, their problems and who can help them. 20 Pair work: Put students in pairs. Ask them to write a description of how Yury changes during his illness and what he looks like after he recovers. Then ask them to join up with another pair and read each other their descriptions. From the two descriptions they write another fuller description. Chapters 9–10 Before reading 21 Guess: Following Yury’s brother Yevgraf ’s advice, the Zhivagos go to Varykino, near Yuryatin. Ask students to discuss the following: What sort of life will they have there? What will Yury do? Will they be able to leave their problems behind? While reading 22 Role play: (page 34) Yury does not want to leave Moscow to settle in the estate of Tonya’s grandfather, but in the end, his wife and father in law persuade him. First ask students to pool ideas about which arguments Tonya and her father might have used to persuade Yury to leave. Then, ask students in small groups to act out the conversation between the three. 23 Discuss: (page 37) Tonya’s father says that, ‘… the revolution is not what they expected, but no political system can stay pure.’ Ask students to discuss the truth in this statement. Do they agree? Why/why not? c Pearson Education Limited 2008 24 Group work: (page 40) We learn about the cruel leader of the Red Army: Strelnikov. Ask students in groups to make a list of the signs of violence and cruelty that Zhivago finds on his journey by train. Then we learn that he is Pasha. Ask student in the same groups to fill in the information about his life from the moment he left Lara and Katya, to the moment Zhivago meets him. 25 Pair work: (page 44) Ask students to work in pairs and discuss this statement: Yury is unfaithful to his wife with Lara. How do you feel about this? Explain why. Was this his only choice? Had he been made to marry a woman he did not love? If they had not being in the middle of a war, would this have happened? After reading 26 Group work: Ask students to write down the two most important feelings that the book causes in them. Then they find two other people who share the same feelings. Together, they explain to the rest of the class what it is about the book that makes them feel like this. 27 Pair work: Ask students in pairs to answer this question: What have you learnt from reading Dr Zhivago so far? Consider not only the characters and the story but the political situation as well. Chapter 11 Before reading 28 Discuss: Ask students: Are you glad to be reading the book? Explain why/why not. While reading 29 Guess: (page 53) Ask students to guess what Yury will decide to do after reading Tonya’s letter. How do you think he feels? 30 Discuss: (page 57) Ask students to discuss the following: Would you agree that Komarovsky succeeds in ruining Lara’s life again? If so, how does he do this? 31 Group work: (page 59) Get students to work in groups and answer the following: Why do you think Yury refuses to go away with Komarovsky and Lara? Can you understand it? How does he trick Lara? Do you think he is right to do so? Is it a strong or a weak thing to do, do you think? 32 Role play: (page 60) Yury persuades Lara to leave with Komarovsky but without him. Ask students to role play the conversation between Yury and Lara. 33 Discuss: (page 62) Ask students to consider the character of Pasha. He was a learned man who could have played a very positive role in the New Russia. Why do you think Pasha kills himself ? Would you describe this as a strong or a weak thing to do? Give reasons for your opinion. Dr Zhivago - Teacher’s notes of 5 Teacher’s notes LEVEL 5 B1402 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme Dr Zhivago After reading 34 Pair work: In pairs, students discuss to what extent they agree with these statements. Then have a whole class discussion about them. (a) In this chapter, Dr Zhivago becomes a tragic story. (b) The tragic events in the lives of Yury, Lara and Pasha are caused by the Revolution, not by individuals. Chapters 12–14 Before reading 35 Guess: Lara is gone and Tanya has left Moscow. Ask students to speculate about the following: What kind of life will Yury find in Moscow? Will he be able to get his job at the hospital back? While reading 36 Group work: (page 65) Put students into groups of three. One student plays Yury, one student plays Misha and one student plays Yevgraf. Misha and Yevgraf talk to Yury, encourage him to sort things out with Tonya, look after himself and his new family, write and find a job. They act out the conversation. 37 Discuss: (page 65) We read that Yury needs to leave his new family to rebuild his life. And that involves writing. Ask students to discuss the following: Why does Yury find it so hard to obey the new rules or commit to a family? Which makes him happier: Medicine or writing? Why? 38 Group work: (page 67) Ask students in small groups to discuss the following questions: What do you learn about Lara and her daughter in these chapters? What is your reaction to this information? What do you think will become of Tanya now? Then they share their ideas with the rest. 40 Discuss: Ask students to discuss the following: Do you think that Dr Zhivago ends on a note of hope or a note of despair? Give reasons for your opinion. Extra activities 41 Group work: Ask students in small groups to draw Yury’s family tree by the end of the novel. How do his children reflect the different stages in his life? Then they display their drawing and share their ideas with the rest. 42 Discuss: Ask students to discuss the following: Which do you think have the most importance in Dr Zhivago: the love stories or the political events? Give reasons for your opinion. Then encourage them to comment on any story – either in a novel or in a film – that is set amid a historical event. How does Dr Zhivago compare to such a story? 43 Pair work: Ask students to discuss the following in pairs of small groups. Which of these adjectives do you think describes Yury Zhivago best? (If necessary, use your dictionary to help you.) Account for your choice with examples from the story. (a) idealistic (b) stubborn (c) committed (d) selfish (e) weak 44 Discuss: Tell students that the 1965 production of Doctor Zhivago, starring Omar Sharif, Geraldine Chaplin and Julie Christie, was very successful and won several awards. Then ask them to consider what the greatest challenge must have been when turning this novel into a film. Vocabulary activities For the Word List and vocabulary activities, go to www.penguinreaders.com. After reading 39 Role play: Ask students to imagine the following situation: Tonya returns to Moscow when the war is over. She meets Yevgraf, who briefs her with the latest news: Yury’s death, his new family, including Tanya. Ask students in pairs to act out the conversation between Tony and Yevgraf. c Pearson Education Limited 2008 Dr Zhivago - Teacher’s notes of 5 Activity worksheets LEVEL 5 Dr Zhivago While reading Chapters 1–3 1 Answer these questions. a In what way is Yury Zhivago unlucky? In what way is he lucky? ……………………………………………… b Explain Komarovsky’s importance in the lives of both Yury Zhivago and Lara Guishar. What kind of man is he? Do you blame Lara for what happens to her with Komarovsky? Give reasons for your opinion. ……………………………………………… ……………………………………………… c What do we learn about the revolution in these chapters? Which characters are involved in it? ……………………………………………… 2 Write an entry in Lara’s diary after one of the parties reflecting how she feels about her double life with Komarovsky. Chapters 4–5 3 Complete these sentences. a Amalia Guishar tries to kill herself because …………………………………………….. . b Yury and Misha Gordon go to Lara’s house because……………………………………. . c Yury and Misha are shocked by what they see in Lara’s house because ……………………. . d Anna Gromeko speaks to Yury alone because …………………………………………….. . e Lara becomes a teacher with a friend’s family because……………………………………. . f Lara’s brother, Rodya, goes to Komarovsky because……………………………………. . g Lara tries to shoot Komarovsky because …………………………………………….. . h Yury and Tonya’s relationship changes because …………………………………………….. . i Yury and Tonya have to leave the party because……………………………………. . j Komarovsky decides to help Lara and never go near her because ……………………….. . 4 Describe Lara from … a Yury’s point of view b your point of view. Can you understand and forgive her for trying to kill Komarovsky? Say why/why not. c Pearson Education Limited 2008 B1402 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme Photocopiable 5 Amalia Guishar tried to poison herself. Write the letter she might have left her friend Tishkevich explaining the reasons that led her to such a tragic decision. Chapters 6–8 6 Explain how these sentences are wrong. a Tonya has a baby daughter in the winter of 1915. ……………………………………………… b Lara teaches Latin and American History at the girl’s high school in Yuryatin. ……………………………………………… c Pasha admires the people of Yuryatin. ……………………………………………… d Pasha and Lara’s relationship is perfect. ……………………………………………… e Pasha joins the army because he wants to fight for Russia. ……………………………………………… f Lara leaves her daughter, Lipa, with a friend and becomes a nurse because she is brokenhearted. ……………………………………………… g Pasha is killed while leading an attack against the Germans. ……………………………………………… h Yury is killed in the hospital building by a bomb. ……………………………………………… 7 Write a letter from Pasha to Lara explaining why he has left her. 8 Who says or writes these words? To whom? Explain the situation. a ‘Thank you for your help. I am a doctor. I can look after myself.’ ……………………………………………… b ‘How could you imagine such a thing? Don’t you feel my love for you?’ ……………………………………………… c ‘But, of course, then I’d knock him down …’ ……………………………………………… d ‘There really was something unhealthy in the way rich people used to live.’ ……………………………………………… e ‘Sasha, what will Daddy think?’ ……………………………………………… Dr Zhivago - Activity worksheets of 2 Activity worksheets LEVEL 5 B1402 Dr Zhivago f ‘This new history must begin now, today, without any concern about what is already here.’ ……………………………………………… g ‘He came every day while you were ill. He took care of all of us.’ ……………………………………………… h ‘We could grow vegetables and hunt for food.’ ……………………………………………… Chapters 9–10 9 Say what you know about these people or things and their part in the Zhivago family story. a cooked duck Vassya Brykin a special train Strelnikov Mikulitsin 10 Imagine that you are one of the people on the train – you can choose to be anyone you want. Write one or two paragraphs about your experiences, your hopes and fears. 11 In Chapter 10, Yury experiences both great problems and great happiness. Explain this statement. 12 Who is Liberius Forester? What kind of life do you think Yury will lead from now on? Why? Chapter 11 13 Read to the middle of page 54 (the end of Tonya’s letter). Give an example of: a The kind of people who join the Forest Brotherhood. ……………………………………………… b Liberius’s success as a leader. ……………………………………………… c Yury’s opposition to Liberius. ……………………………………………… d the terrible, cruel things that the armies do to each other. ……………………………………………… 14 Complete these sentences. a Yury escapes from the Brotherhood by …………………………………………….. . b After Yury has eaten potatoes at Lara’s house he …………………………………………. . c While Yury is ill, Lara …………………….. . c Pearson Education Limited 2008 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme Photocopiable d At first Yury can’t go to Moscow because …………………………………………….. . e Yury finds a job …………………………… . f Officials think that Yury…………………… . g Lara is in danger because………………….. . h In her letter, Tonya tells Yury that…………. . 15 What is your opinion of Yury after reading these pages? Has it changed? Say why (not). 16 Put these events in the right order numbered 1–5. a c Pasha kills himself. b c Yury and Lara live together in Varykino. c c Komarovsky tells Yury that Strelnikov has been shot. d c Pasha and Yury talk about Lara. e c Lara and Komarovsky leave for Vladivostok. 17 Pahsa wanted to be judged for all the things he felt guilty about from the last ten years. Write a list of the things about his family and his political career that Pasha might regret. Chapters 12–14 18 Answer these questions. a How does Yury help people once he returns to Moscow? ……………………………………………… b How do people help him? ……………………………………………… c How has Yury changed? ……………………………………………… d How do you think the story will end? ……………………………………………… After reading 19 Dr Zhivago is considered a very important Russian novel. Why do you think this is so? Write your opinion in one paragraph. 20 Write a review. Imagine your school is holding a writing competition for free tickets to the film of your choice. Your entry in the competition is a review of the book you have read for your English course. You decide to write about Dr Zhivago. Remember to include a brief description of the plot, and your opinion on the story. Dr Zhivago - Activity worksheets of 2 Progress test LEVEL 5 Dr Zhivago 1 What happened first in the story? Number the sentences 1–10. a c Yury’s father jumped off a train to Duplyanka and killed himself. b c Yury’s mother died. c c Yury was sent to Moscow to live with the Gromekos, a rich family distantly related to him. d c Yury and Uncle Kolya travelled to the farm in Duplyanka. e c Yury lived in a beautiful estate with a park listening to his uncle discuss agricultural changes. f c Yury’s father left home and went to Siberia. This was the last time the boy saw him. g c Yury was taken up by Uncle Kolya, his mother’s brother. h c Yury’s mother enjoyed nature and took him on long walks in the countryside. i c Yury adopted Christian philosophy. j c Tonya became Yury’s close friend. 2 Read this information about the people in the story. Who are they? Write the names in each sentence. Pasha Yury Lara Tonya Misha a ………… studied medicine because he wanted to do something useful but he loved writing poems too. b ………… was born in a rich family who loved literature and music. c ………… was a well-read teacher who later became a very important leader of the revolutionary forces. d ………… took a job as a private teacher and saved the money for her education. e ………… studied philosophy and enjoyed having long talks with Yury about the political situation. 3 Are these sentences right (3) or wrong (7)? a Yury spoke to Lara for the first time when he was recovering from his wounds in hospital. c b Pasha joined the army at Omsk because he wanted to be away from Lara. c c Once recovered, Yury arrived in peaceful Moscow. c d Yury and Uncle Kolya opposed the Revolution and the Bolsheviks from the start. c e After the Revolution, life for the Gromekos was difficult and Yury was ill. c c Pearson Education Limited 2008 B1402 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme Photocopiable 4 Choose the correct answer. a Yury started going to the library in Yuryatin ….. 1) because his heart disease did not allow him to work. 2) because he knew Lara would be there. 3) to find material for the important book he wanted to write. b Before he could tell Lara that they should not see each other again, Yury ….. 1) was captured by the Forest Brotherhood to become their doctor. 2) realised she was going to have his child. 3) learnt that Uncle Kolya had died. c Lara believed the evil of the revolution appeared when people ….. 1) created the labour gangs and the Forest Brotherhood. 2) stopped listening to the voices of individuals. 3) followed the new rules. d Lara left for the east with Komarovsky because ….. 1) he threatened her with telling Yury the truth about her past. 2) her child needed medical care. 3) she believed Yury was soon going to join her. e Yury tells Strelnikov that his wife ….. 1) would have done anything to go back to their happy old days. 2) had left with Komarovsky. 3) had taken up her old job as a teacher. 5 Complete these sentences. a When he got back to Moscow, Yury learnt that his family…………………………………………… . b Yury’s books about his philosophy of life, his views on medicine, his ideas on history and religion, and his poems became ………………………………. . c Yury lived with Markel, an old servant of the Gromekos’. They felt lucky because their house ………………………………………………….. . d When Yury did not come home for three days, his wife Marina asked………………………………. . e Lara gave up the child she had by Yury soon after she was born but Yevgraf ……………………….. . Dr Zhivago - Progress test of 1 Answer keys LEVEL 5 B1402 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme Dr Zhivago Book key 1 1890: Boris Pasternak was born in Moscow. 1904: strikes and street-fighting. 1905: citizens over twenty-five given the vote, but the new parliament had little power. 1914: Russia joined the First World War. 1917: the Russian Revolution. 1922: Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was set up. 1957: the book, Dr Zhivago, appeared in Italy. 1958: Boris Pasternak won the Nobel Prize for Literature. 1960: Boris Pasternak died. 1965: the film, Doctor Zhivago, appeared. 2 a commit suicide b country estate c elegant dress d determined effort e slap face f grey wolf g railway carriage h Russian revolution i sensational story j wept tears 3 Open answer 4 a Yury Andreyevich Zhivago b Nikolay Nikolayevich Vedenyapin c Misha Gordon d Victor Ippolitovich Komarovsky e Tonya Gromeko f Larissa Fyodorovna Guishar g Pavel Pavlovich Antipov h Tishkevich 5 1 c 2 g 3 a 4 e 5 d 6 b 7 f 6–8 Open answers 9 a Amalia Guishar b Komarovsky c Lara d Yury e Yevgraf f Nadya’s parents g Rodya 10 a Amalia Guishar has tried to poison herself. b Lara and Komarovsky. c Lara tries to shoot Komarovsky. d After she shoots him, he tries to avoid her. e Anna Ivanova dies. 11–13 Open answers 14 a leave > find b German > Jewish c escaped > died d Moscow > Petersburg e happy > embarrassed f soldiers > peasants g philosophy > politics h happy > depressed i soldiers > Bolsheviks j Kolya > Yevgraf 15 a Join the army / go to the army school in Omsk b He is knocked down by an explosion. c ‘young and serious, not exactly handsome but intelligent, with a very attractive character.’ d New ideas in philosopy, art and politics. e The family can only use three rooms now. c Pearson Education Limited 2008 f He has never seen him before. g He helps and protects them. h They are cold and hungry. 16 The October Revolution. The Bolsheviks are fighting against the soldiers from the Provisional Government. 17–18 Open answers 19 a exchanges b sends c hear d meets e gives f sees g come 20 a tickets, permission papers, information b He asked the guard to let Vassya take his place on the train while he kissed his wife. Then he left. c As insurance, to prevent any more trouble in the district. d They clear snow and look for wood. e The guards think that he’s a spy. f He feels shy and doesn’t want to interrupt her work. g He feels like a criminal and that he is putting his family’s happiness and safety at risk. h He is taken away by Liberius’s men. 21 1 b 2 e 3 a 4 f 5 c 6 d 22 Open answer 23 a The Reds b Open answer 24 a F b T c F d T e F f T g T h F i F j T 25 Open answer 26 a Lara to Yury b Yury to Komarovsky c Pasha to Yury 27 Open answer 28 a 7 b 5 c 4 d 6 e 2 f 1 g 3 29–40 Open answers Discussion activities key 1 Communism is a political system of belief that says that no one should own private property. It began with the theories of Karl Marx (1818–83) who believed that everyone should be ‘equal’, with no great differences in position or money. The Russian Revolution established Communism as the political system of Russian. a) This was the year of the first Russian Revolution, which was a battle between the government of Nicholas II, the last tsar of Russia and groups of workers, peasants and soldiers who wanted a fairer system of government. b) Tsar Nicholas II’s government ended and a new government was put in place. Dr Zhivago - Answer keys of 4 Answer keys LEVEL 5 B1402 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme Dr Zhivago c) The Tsar and his family were murdered. d) The Bolsheviks, led by Lenin, took over the government. 2 a) Because Russia’s ruling family was murdered and an entirely new political system replaced it. b) Uncertainty about the future, poverty, loss of jobs, the possibility of imprisonment and even death. 3– 4 Open answers 5 Suggested answer: He might have been in great financial trouble. Perhaps he could not repay his gambling debts. 6–11 Open answers 12 Suggested answer: Yury is intrigued by beautiful Lara and evil Komarovsky. 13 Open answer 14 Suggested answer: First World War broke out in 1914 after Duke Francis Ferdinand was killed in Sarajevo. It lasted four years, until 1918. Russia fought the Axis powers (Italy and Germany) alongside Britain and France, but the Communist government signed a treaty with the Germans before the end of the War. 15–37 Open answer 38 Lara had a child by Yury called Tanya. But because Komarovsky did not want children around, Lara asked a young couple to look after Tanya for a while. The child never saw her mother again – she ran away from home and became homeless. Eventually, in 1929, Lara came to Moscow looking for her daughter. She did not find her but was able to visit Yury’s coffin and say goodbye to him. After that, Lara disappeared or died, probably in prison. In 1943, Tanya was discovered by Yury’s half brother Yevgraf, in an army camp doing the laundry. We know that Yevgraf will look after her now. 39–44 Open answers Activity worksheets key 1 a Yury is unlucky because he loses his mother when he is ten years old and his father is a drunkard who loses all his wealth and commits suicide, leaving Yury an orphan. Yury is lucky because his uncle, who looks after him at first, is a very good and loving man. Yury goes to live with the Gromeko family where he is very happy. They live the kind of life that is ‘proper’ for a Zhivago – in other words they are wealthy and mix with high society. c Pearson Education Limited 2008 b The lawyer Komarovsky encourages Zhivago, Yury’s father, to drink because ‘it is in some way to his advantage’. In other words, when Zhivago is drunk, he is more likely to do what Komarovsky says (Zhivago probably pays Komarovsky more than he should). On the train to Duplyanka, Komarovsky encourages Zhivago to drink and this leads to Zhivago’s suicide. So, we can say that Komarovsky is in some way responsible for Yury’s father’s death. Komarovsky seduces (= persuades someone to have sex) Lara when she is only sixteen. This is a wicked thing for an older man to do to a young girl. In those days this kind of thing had a terrible effect on a young woman’s life and possibilty of marriage. c In 1905 many groups of workers in Moscow went on strike and marched in the street. On October 17th, the Tsar agreed to give land to the Russian peasants. But this did not happen and conditions for farmers and workers grew worse. Pasha Antipov wanted change in his country and was willing to fight on the streets for it. Yuri’s Uncle Kolya wrote several important revolutionary books. 2 Open answer 3 a … she suspects that Lara and Komarovsky are sleeping together. b … Amalia Guishar has tried to poison herself. A message is sent to her violinist friend, Tishkevich, who is playing in a concert at Mr Gromeko’s house. Mr Gromeko goes with Tishkevich to Amalia Guishar’s house and Yury and Misha with him. c … they see Lara and Komarovsky together and it is obvious that something forbidden is happening between them, something wrong. d … she wants Yury to think carefully about his future. She knows that he will get nothing from his father’s estate. e … she wants to live away from her mother and in this way get away from Komarovsky. She can only do this by earning enough money to live independently. f … he has gambling debts he needs to repay. g … she feels that once again he has destroyed her life. He told her brother that if she would speak to him he would help him. What he really means is that if she returns to him he will help her brother. Lara has to borrow money from Mr. Kologrivov to help her brother. But she has no money to pay Dr Zhivago - Answer keys of 4 Answer keys LEVEL 5 B1402 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme Dr Zhivago them back. She decides to demand money from Komarovsky and shoot him if he refuses. But instead she just shoots him, probably because she is so angry. h … Tonya’s mother, Anna Ivanova, asks them to stay together if she dies. For the first time Yury and Tonya look at each other as a man and woman and realise they are in love with each other. i … they hear that Tonya’s mother is dying or dead. When they get back home she is dead. j … he does not want gossip to link him with Lara or the shooting. He wants to keep her quiet and out of the way. 4–5 Open answers 6 a Tonya has a son in the autumn of 1915. b We are not told what Lara teaches at the high school. c Not true. Pasha is very critical of them. He thinks their political ideas are very simple. He studies and educates himself to a high degree and misses the big city. d Pasha and Lara love each other deeply but are unable to be completely natural with each other. Pasha knows about Komarovsky, he questions Lara’s love for him and even his love for her. e Pasha joins the army because he wants to be away from Lara. f Laura leaves her daughter Katya with an old student, Lipa, and becomes a nurse in order to look for Pasha. g Pasha is believed to be killed while leading an attack against the Austrians. h Yury is knocked unconscious just before he reaches the hospital building. 7 Open answer 8 a Yury says this to Lara when he talks to her for the first time in the army hospital where he is a patient. b Yury writes these words to Tonya, who has written to him begging him to leave her for Lara. c Yury says these words to Lara. He did not intend to say them as they show how much he cares about her. He intended to tell her he was worried about her. d Tonya says this to Yury on his return to Moscow. People in Moscow are now very poor and the Zhivagos only have the use of three rooms in their house. c Pearson Education Limited 2008 e Tonya says this to her son Sasha who has slapped his father’s face. The child has never seen his father before. f Yury says this to Tonya late one night as they discuss the fact that a new government, ‘the Dictatorship of the Proletariat’ has been formed. g Tonya says this to Yury as he recovers from typhus, an illness which nearly killed him. Tonya is talking about Yury’s half brother, Yevgraf, who visited the family and brought them food. h Tonya says this to Yury. They have decided, at Yevgraf ’s suggestion, to leave Moscow and go to Tonya’s grandfather’s estate near Yuryatin. 9 a cooked duck: An old peasant gives Tonya the duck in exchange for a beautifully decorated towel. Vassya Brykin: This is a sixteen-year-old boy belonging to one of the labour gangs travelling on the train. He is attractive and innocent. He is in the labour gang because his uncle cruelly allowed him to take his place in the labour gang. A special train: Yuri is taken to this train because he is asking questions and some guards think he is a spy. The train is being used as the offices of the Red Army Commissar Strelnikov. Strelnikov: He is the leader of the Red Army in that region and has done terrible things, destroying and burning villages. He is brilliant and original. He talks to Yury and allows him to go free. In fact, he is Pasha, Lara’s husband. Mikulitsin: He worked for the Krueger’s, who were Tonya’s grandparents. Now he lives in what used to be the estate manager’s house. He gives the Zhivago’s two rooms at the back of the big house and helps them in many ways. 10 Open answers 11 Yuri lives happily with the family, feeling very close to them and contented. But then he realises that he has the same heart disease as his mother had. Then he meets Lara again in the library at Yuryatin and is unfaithful to Tonya with her. This causes him both happiness and pain, as he hates to be unfaithful to Tonya. Finally, he is kidnapped by three men on horseback who take him off to join their Bolshevik army. 12 He is the son of Avercius Mikulitsin, who has allowed the Zhivagos to live on the Krueger estate. Although Liberius is very young, he is an important Bolshevik leader. Dr Zhivago - Answer keys of 4 Answer keys LEVEL 5 B1402 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme Dr Zhivago 13 a Peasants, soldiers from the German army, churchmen, students, disappointed politicians and true revolutionaries. b Liberius get results. The Forest Brotherhood helped to drive the Whites towards the East. During Yury’s time in the Brotherhood, the Brotherhood grows to ten times its original size. c Yury can’t accept the extreme acts of cruelty. He can’t agree with the ideas that people like Liberius wish to force on all Russians. He hates Liberius for kidnapping him. d Soldiers in the White Army cut off a man’s arm and leg and tie them to his back as a warning to the Brotherhood. 14 a … walking out of the camp using the Brotherhood’s secret words. He has hidden food, heavy clothes and boots near the edge of the camp. He walks from Siberia to Yuryatin. b … becomes very ill. c … looks after him. d … he is too weak. e … at a hospital. f … is too independent in his ideas. g … the leaders know that Strelnikov is her husband. He has never been a member of the Bolshevik Party and is no longer considered a hero. h … her family and children, including Uncle Kolya and her father, have had to leave Russia. She tells him that she loves him and knows he doesn’t love her. 15 Open answers c Pearson Education Limited 2008 16 a 5 b 1 c 2 d 4 e 3 17 Open answers 18 a Yury helps the young peasant boy, Vassya, to get a place at the Stroganov Institute. b Vassya puts together the books that Yury writes. Markel, who had been chief servant at the Gromeko’s home, helps Yury and allows him to use the hot water in his rooms. Markel’s elder daughter sews Yury’s clothes, cleans his room and takes food to him. c Yury writes short books ‘on a variety of subjects and these become very popular. However, in some ways he seems to be a broken man. He wants to close himself off from the world and does not work as a doctor any more. After Vassya leaves, Yury stops seeing his friends and becomes quite strange and helpless.’ d Open answer 19–20 Open answer Progress test key 1 a 7 b 3 c 9 d 6 e 8 f 2 g 4 h 1 i 5 j 10 2 a Yury b Tonya c Pasha d Lara e Misha 3 a 3 b 3 c 7 d 7 e 3 4 a 3 b 1 c 2 d 3 e 1 5 a … had left the city/had gone away from Moscow. b very popular. c was dry and warm, and they had a lot of hot water. d Misha for help. e found her and looked after her. Dr Zhivago - Answer keys of 4 Teacher’s notes LEVEL 5 B1402 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme The Body Stephen King About the author Stephen King is the highest-earning author in the world. Since selling his first book in 1973, he has published over thirty novels, of which there are more than 150 million copies in print. He earns $2 million a month from book sales and film returns. All this was achieved from poor beginnings and King’s is a success story that could itself have come from the pages of fiction. King was born in 1947 in Portland, Maine, the American state where The Body is set. His father, a merchant seaman, deserted the family in 1950, and Stephen and his brother David were raised alone by their mother. Early on in life, King became addicted to radio horror tales and science fiction films. According to one report, he was ‘oversized and ungainly’ as a boy and ‘predictably chosen last’ in team games. At high school, he began to write stories, and at the University of Maine took creative writing courses. After college, King worked in a launderette until he found a teaching position. From 1971 to 1973, while he taught at a secondary school in Hampden, Maine, he continued to write, often in the school’s boiler room, with a child’s desk against his knees. By then he was married, had a child and was weighed down with bills. But in 1973 he sold his first novel, Carrie. When his publishers, Doubleday, told him that paperback rights to the book had been sold for $400,000 he was freed from teaching and able to devote himself full-time to writing. Summary The Body is quite different from most of Stephen King’s other work, in that it is not a horror story, although it does contain one or two nasty moments. It was originally published as part of a collection of tales called Different c Pearson Education Limited 2008 Seasons (1982), a book in which King wished to show the different side of his imagination. The semi-autobiographical story concerns four young boys, growing up in a poorer area of 1960s Maine, in the northeast corner of the United States. The boys, Gordie Lachance, Vern Tessio, Chris Chambers and Teddy Duchamp, are all about to turn thirteen. When they hear about the death of another boy, who was walking in the forest miles from his home, they cannot resist the temptation to go and look for his body, though they know the journey will be long and dangerous. The adventure becomes a turning point in all their lives as they face the dangers and wonders of the forest and some of the bigger questions of their lives to come. Full of the atmosphere of a teenage summer, The Body is both an adventure story and a portrait of four boys on the first step of their journey into adulthood. Chapter 1: The narrator of the story (Gordie Lachance) remembers seeing a dead person when he was twelve years old. That memory stays with him today. Chapter 2: Gordie (Gordon) is in a tree house with Teddy Duchamp and Chris Chambers on the last Friday of the summer holidays. Vern Tessio, the fourth member of their club, arrives. He has news about a body that has been found in the forest. He suggests they go see it. Chapter 3: Gordie recalls hearing that a boy their age (Ray Brower) has been missing for three days. He had been picking wild fruit in the forest. Chapter 4: We learn how Vern found out about the body. He overheard his older brother Billy (who is part of a gang) talking about the body to a tough guy named Charlie. The two had been out in the forest when they accidentally came across the body of a boy. They did not tell the police because they had driven out to that location in a stolen car. Chapter 5: The boys think they will need to walk about thirty miles to find the body. When they find the body, they will report it to the police and become famous. They plan to leave that day (Friday) and camp overnight in the forest. They will tell their parents they are camping in Vern’s back field. Chapter 6: Gordie has no problem getting permission. His older brother died five months ago, and his parents do not pay much attention to him. The Body - Teacher’s notes of 5 Teacher’s notes LEVEL 5 B1402 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme The Body Chapter 7: Gordie meets Chris. Chris shows Gordie that he is taking along his father’s gun. Chris says his father is drunk and will not miss it. Chapter 20: The boys find the body in the midst of a terrible thunderstorm. It seems the boy was trying to get out of the way when a train hit him. Chapter 8: The boys start on their journey. They realise they will need water and food. They plan to go to the dump for water. Teddy tries to play a dangerous game by stepping in front of a train but Gordie stops him. Chapter 21: Ace Merrill, the leader of the gang, and five others (including the brothers of Chris and Vern) arrive. They plan to take the body but the boys talk back. Chris pulls out the gun and threatens Ace. Chapter 9: The dump is closed and the boys climb the fence to get water. They worry about meeting Milo Pressman, the manager of the dump, and his dog, Chopper. (The dog has as a reputation for being fierce.) They flip a coin to decide who will leave to buy food. Gordie loses the toss. Chapter 22: Vern and Teddy run off and leave Chris and Gordie to face the gang. Ace and the gang leave with the threat that they will get the four boys later. Chapter 10: Gordie returns with food. He enters the dump and gets chased by Chopper and an angry Milo. Teddy teases Chopper. Milo insults Teddy by talking about Teddy’s father’s psychiatric problems. Chapter 11: Chris tries to make Teddy feel better about Milo’s comments. Vern says they are going to see a dead body, so maybe they should not have a good time. Chapter 12: The boys cross a railway bridge that was not made for walking across. Vern and Gordie narrowly avoid getting hit by a train. Chapter 13: Chris tells Gordie that changes are coming at school as Gordie starts taking courses that will prepare him for college while the others take shop courses. Chris talks about his family’s bad reputation and about being betrayed by a teacher. He says that friends can drag a person down. Chapter 14: The boys set up camp and Gordie tells a story. Gordie thinks about the body alone in the forest. Chapter 15: The boys wake up to the sound of loud screaming. They are not sure what it is and take turns guarding the camp. Gordie dreams about Chris being dragged under the water by Vern and Teddy. Chapter 16: The sun comes up and Gordie has a special moment when he sees a deer alongside the railway tracks. A train goes by and wakes up the other boys. Chapter 17: The boys jump into a pool of water to cool off. It is full of leeches. Chapter 18: The boys realise they still have a long way to go before they will get to the body. Chapter 19: While the boys continue their journey, a gang of six (including Billy and Charlie who saw the body first) are travelling by car to that same location. They also plan to be heroes by discovering the body. c Pearson Education Limited 2008 Chapter 23: Chris decides they should leave the body in the forest. Gordie wonders about Ray Brower and the missing bucket of fruit. Chapter 24: The boys get back to town early Sunday morning. Chris worries that Teddy and Vern will tell others but Gordie suggests this will not happen for a long time and that Teddy and Vern will almost forget everything that happened. Chapter 25: Gordie sees his mother on Sunday morning, She only talks about missing his dead brother. Chapter 26: The police get an anonymous call from Ace about the location of the body. Neither group gets credit for finding it. All four boys are beat up at different times but the story about their meeting the gang in the forest never gets out. Teddy and Vern find new friends. Chapter 27: Gordie thinks about the deaths of his three friends. Vern is killed in a fire at a house party. Teddy drives drunk and dies in a car accident. Chris studies hard alongside Gordie and goes on to graduate school. Chris dies trying to break up a fight between two strangers. Meanwhile, Gordie becomes a writer and writes this book. About the film The Body was filmed in 1986 as Stand By Me with the late River Phoenix as Chris Chambers. Background and themes Many of the ingredients that now characterise what we think of as a Stephen King novel can be found in King’s first novel Carrie: small-town New England, usually thought of as a quiet, conventional part of America, becomes the arena for a battle of good versus evil. Psychic powers or some supernatural creature – or both – cause a series of horrible events in what was an ordinary, sleepy town. The Body - Teacher’s notes of 5 Teacher’s notes LEVEL 5 B1402 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme The Body In fact, New England – where some of the first European settlements in North America were established in the seventeenth century – is no stranger to the supernatural. When most of America was still the home of so-called Indian ‘savages’, the fragile colonial settlements lived in fear of the wildness beyond their fences. The forests became a symbol of evil and the unknown – the horror of untamed nature. In 1960, the year in which The Body is set, the New England forests were still quite extensive. Since then, the city suburbs and roads have forced them back, but in 1960, according to King ‘it was still possible to walk into the woods and lose your direction and die there’. The mysteries of these forests play a large part in The Body, since it is there that the four young heroes of the book decide to go to undertake their life-changing quest. As they travel further from civilisation, the boys have to rely on their own personal resources, and must grow up to face what comes. However, as well as terrors and the harsh realities of life, the wilderness reveals its secret wonders. Their journey to see another boy’s dead body becomes a journey out of innocence. The Body is set at the beginning of a decade in which America, too, was shaken out of its innocence. 1960 was the year that John F Kennedy was elected president, on a wave of optimism. But only three years later, the youthful promise that he symbolised to so many was ended when he was shot. The shock of Kennedy’s assassination was tremendous. Many Americans were confused by the seeming irrationality of the event. From 1962 onwards, the American military increased its presence in Vietnam. But at the same time protests against the war grew in strength as America’s youth grew in a new self-confidence. Those who entered their teenage years in the sixties were entering an era when the culture and values of the young would be totally different from those of the parents. Discussion activities Before reading 1 Discuss: Ask students to look at the picture on the cover of this book. What can you see? What do you expect to see? What kind of feelings do you get from this picture? Write the students’ ideas on a chart. I see … I expect to see … c Pearson Education Limited 2008 I feel … 2 Guess: Have students look at the title of the story (The Body). Ask them to imagine what might happen in the story. Have them share their thoughts in a group. (Have them look at the extended name on the title page, Fall from Innocence: The Body. Does this give them further ideas?) Write down possible story ideas on the board. 3 Group work: This story is about four twelve-year-old boys. In groups, have students think back to when they and their friends/classmates were twelve years old. What words can you use to describe a twelve-yearold boy? What do twelve-year-old boys like? What do twelve-year-old boys hope for? Have them write down their ideas in a chart. I am a 12-year-old boy. I am … I like … I hope … Have students share their ideas in class. Do they see lots of differences among boys at this age? How might they compare the characteristics, interests and hopes of boys at this age to girls? Introduction Before reading 4 Guess: Stephen King is famous for writing horror stories. This story has elements of horror and is based on King’s childhood. Put students into groups. Have them discuss what things may have happened in King’s childhood that made him into a writer of horror stories. Then have students read the Introduction. In groups, have them list important facts they have learned about King. Have them share their ideas with the rest of the class. Chapters 1–6 Before reading 5 Discuss: The opening sentence of the book is: ‘The most important things are the hardest things to say.’ Is this the same for children and for adults? What kind of ‘important things’ might be hard for a twelve-year-old boy to talk about? After reading 6 Pair work: In pairs, have students research one of the boys. Have them complete a chart outlining the boy’s relationship with his family. Have them consider how this might affect the boy’s behaviour during the story. Name of boy Family members (and characteristics) Relationships (How does the family get along?) Thoughts about boy (relating to story) The Body - Teacher’s notes of 5 Teacher’s notes LEVEL 5 B1402 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme The Body As a class, complete a chart that outlines the main points of all four boys. Have pairs of students provide their ideas for each boy. 7 Guess: Think about the boys’ plans to see the body. What problems could they have on this journey? Discuss ideas as a class. Write them down on a chart that can be referred to later. Chapters 7–9 While reading 8 Role play: Read Chapter 7. Think about Chris’s plan to bring along the gun on the journey. Get students to plan and dramatise a role play between Chris and Gordie. Student A: You are Chris. Give reasons why you want to bring along the gun. Student B: You are Gordie. Explain to Chris why it might not be a good idea. What could happen? After reading 9 Discuss: Talk about the significance of ‘that moment’ from Chapter 8 on page 15 when Gordie is looking down the railway track with the town behind him. What might Gordie be thinking about? Why will he never forget that moment? 10 Write and discuss: As a class, discuss Teddy’s moment on the railroad tracks and Gordie’s response. Do you remember a daring/exciting/scary experience from your childhood? (It could be something you experienced or observed.) What happened? How did you feel? Have students write a paragraph describing an event: I’ll always the remember the time I … Let students know they will have a short time to write their paragraph and they will be sharing it with others. Teachers may want to read aloud a paragraph that they have written as an example. After writing, have students place their paragraphs on desks around the classroom. Have students go from desk to desk and read each other’s work. They can write a short response at the end of the paragraph before moving onto the next. At the end, have students collect their paragraphs and read the comments. Have them share their thoughts and experiences with the class. 11 Pair work: Think about Gordie’s statement on page 19: ‘I never had any friends later like the ones I had when I was twelve. Did you?’ Have students remember a special friend they had when they were young. Write down a few things you remember about your friend. What did he or she look like? What are some characteristics about your friend? What did you like to do together? Are you still friends with this person today? Do you know what this friend is doing? Have students complete a chart and talk about the friend with a partner. c Pearson Education Limited 2008 Appearance Characteristics My friend Activities Today …? Chapters 10–11 After reading 12 Artwork: Read the line that begins Chapter 10 on page 20. ‘Words mean different things to different people.’ Gordie describes what the word ‘summer’ means to him. Choose a word that has meaning to them, such as school, family, my hometown, my grandma’s house. Have them write that word in the centre of a page and then draw pictures and/or write words or expressions that represent that word to them. 13 Discuss: At the end of Chapter 10 on page 25, Gordie says he looked at Milo Pressman ‘and I suddenly felt sorry for him. He looked exactly like a schoolboy locked in the school playground by mistake …’ As a class, discuss what Gordie means by this comment. What kind of advice could they give Milo Pressman? Chapters 12–14 After reading 14 Write: Imagine you are Gordie. You are writing in your diary that night about crossing the railway bridge. What would you write? Thinking back on it, how would you feel? Dear Diary, Today I … 15 Role play: Think about Chris and his future studies. Have students imagine a conversation between Chris and a guidance counsellor (or teacher) who wants to help him plan his upcoming classes at school and his future career. Student A: You are Chris. What concerns do you have? What do you see happening in your future? What do you want to happen? Student B: You are a school guidance counsellor (or teacher). What do you know about Chris? What questions do you want to ask him? What kind of advice can you give him? Write down your thoughts. Present your dialogue to the class. Chapters 15–18 Before reading 16 Guess: The boys are sleeping in the dark forest. What could happen in the night? Have students share their ideas. Write their suggestions on the board. The Body - Teacher’s notes of 5 Teacher’s notes LEVEL 5 B1402 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme The Body While reading 17 Group work: Read the first section of Chapter 15 to the line on page 41: ‘It was the sort of scream you might expect from a woman who was dying in extreme pain and extreme fear.’ Discuss in groups: What can be making this sound? What can the boys do? What will the boys do? What will happen? Share your ideas as a class. After reading 18 Check: Compare your thoughts in activities 16 and 17 with what actually happened. Discuss the boys’ response to the events the next morning. 19 Discuss: Why doesn’t Gordie tell anyone about the deer? Why does he think it was the best part of the trip? Why does Gordie remember the deer at difficult times in his life? 20 Read carefully: In pairs, have students list what they have learned about leeches by reading Chapter 17. Have them share their facts together. How would they feel if they were the boys? Have any of them seen leeches? Chapters 19–21 Before reading 21 Check: Think about what will happen from now until the end of the story. Have students check their guesses from activity 7 after reading Chapters 1– 6. Have their ideas changed? While reading 22 Group work: After reading Chapter 19, discuss Gordie’s line from page 52: ‘The big things in life should never be easy; they should be marked in some way as important’. What difficult events had turned this trip into ‘a serious matter’. Make a list of the boys’ difficulties. After reading 23 Guess: On page 51, we learn that Chris, Vern and Teddy are going to die young. (Note that they don’t die in this story.) Ask students in small groups to guess what might happen to each of these boys. Also have them make guesses about the types of jobs or schooling the boys might have in the next few years. 24 Role play: Put students into groups of four (with each taking the role of one of the boys). Ask them to imagine a conversation the young boys have six months later. Have them role play the conversation with each of them taking the role of one of the boys. Have them discuss how they honestly felt when they discovered the body. Example: Student A (as Gordie): So, Vern, what did you think when you first saw the body? Student B (as Vern): At first, I felt excited! We walked a long way to find it … c Pearson Education Limited 2008 25 Write: On page 60, Gordie says he could have had a ‘reasonable argument’ with Ace but instead he said, ‘Go to hell, Ace.’ Imagine what Gordie could have said to Ace. Write your thoughts in a letter to Ace from Gordie. Ace, I met you in the forest last Saturday. I wanted to write you a letter to explain my feelings … 26 Check: Look again at your guesses from activities 7 and 21. Check what you thought could happen in the story opposite what actually happened. Chapters 22–27 While reading 27 Guess: Before reading Chapter 26, guess what will happen: to the body of Roy Brower; to the four boys; to the friendship of the four boys. After reading 28 Discuss: Look again at the conversation between Gordie and Chris in Chapter 24 on pages 68– 69. When the boys get back into town, Gordie would probably like to tell Chris that he loves him, but he cannot. Why? Is it because they are both boys? Would it be different for two boys today? 29 Group work: In groups, discuss the parents’ response to the boy’s late return on Sunday morning. Discuss the following: What did the parents of each of the boys say or do (if anything) about their late return? How do you think the boys would feel about their response? How would you feel if you were the boys? 30 Check: Look at your guesses from activity 23. Did any of the students guess correctly? Was there anything in the story that could have helped them guess what happened? Extra activities 31 Discuss: In groups, talk about the effects the adventure had on the boys’ friendships. Do they think things would have been different between the boys later if the boys had not had this adventure together? What did they learn about each other on this journey? 32 Pair work: Have students return to the partner they worked with in activity 6. Have them look at their original chart and check the thoughts they had about the boy they researched. Were they surprised by the boy’s actions in the story or did they predict them? As a class, have students share their ideas about all the boys. Vocabulary activities For the Word List and vocabulary activities, go to www.penguinreaders.com. The Body - Teacher’s notes of 5 Activity worksheets LEVEL 5 B1402 The Body While reading Chapters 1–6 1 Complete these notes about the story. a The story happens in a town called ……………… in the state of ………………, USA. b It begins on a Friday in the month of ……………… in the year ……………… . c The weather is ……………… and ……………… . d There are ……………… or ……………… ‘regulars’ in the boys’ club. e When the boys talk about the dead body, there are ……………… of them in the tree house. f The storyteller’s first name is ……………… . g The name of the boy who is missing in the forest is ……………… . h ……………… is the name of the boy who tells the others in the tree house about the body. 2 Who are the boys? Choose the right name. a ….. wears thick glasses and likes to take crazy chances. b ….. has a father who drinks. c ….. is like Teddy – not very intelligent. d ….. is ‘invisible’ at home. 1) Gordie (the storyteller) 2) Teddy 3) Chris 4) Vern Chapters 7–9 3 Put these events in the correct order (1–7). a c The boys reach the dump. b c The boys throw coins to see who will go and get some food. c c Teddy turns to face the train that is coming down the tracks. d c Gordie goes to buy some food. e c The boys see how much money they have got altogether. f c The boys drink water from the tap. g c Gordie pulls Teddy away from the train tracks. 4 Underline the mistakes in the sentences and correct them. a Chris has a gun that belongs to his brother. ……………………………………………… c Pearson Education Limited 2008 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme Photocopiable b Teddy is the bravest guy in the boys’ gang. ……………………………………………… c Gordie thinks they will have to walk thirteen miles. ……………………………………………… d The boys are scared about seeing wild animals in the dump. ……………………………………………… e The boys toss the coins and get four tails. That’s good luck. ……………………………………………… Chapters 10–11 5 Match and complete the sentences. a The boys are surprised when they see Chopper because ….. b When Gordie hears Milo he feels scared because ….. c When Milo sees the boys he feels angry because ….. d When Milo yells at Teddy, Teddy feels upset because ….. e Chris is the best person to talk to Teddy because ….. f Vern says that they should not have a good time because ….. 1) they are teasing his dog. 2) he knows how to make people feel better. 3) he is an ordinary dog. 4) they are going to see a dead guy. 5) he is afraid of Chopper. 6) he doesn’t like to hear bad things about his father. Chapters 12–14 6 Who said what? Imagine which boy would say each of the sentences below as he crossed the railway bridge. a ….. ‘This is a great dare! A train could be coming any minute now!’ b ….. ‘I have a terrible feeling that a train is coming. We need to run fast!’ c ….. ‘Sometimes you have to show that you are brave by doing something like this.’ d ….. ‘I have to do this or the guys will think I’m scared. I’m going to walk very carefully.’ 1) Vern 2) Teddy 3) Chris 4) Gordie The Body - Activity worksheets of 2 Activity worksheets LEVEL 5 The Body 7 Underline YES or NO. a Is Gordie scared when he is on the train tracks? YES NO b Does Chris think Gordie will be friends with the three boys next year? YES NO c Did Chris take the milk money from school last year? YES NO d Did Chris try to return the money? YES NO e Does Gordie feel scared when he thinks about the body of the boy? YES NO Chapters 15–18 8 Put these words in the correct spaces. guard scream deer wild cat forest dream ghost The boys wake up in the (a) ……………… . They hear a loud (b) ……………… . Teddy thinks it might be the (c) ……………… of the missing boy. Chris thinks it could be a (d) ……………… . The boys decide to take turns keeping (e) ……………… . Finally, Gordie falls asleep and has a (f ) ……………… . In the morning, Gordie is happy to see a (g) ……………… by the railway tracks. 9 Think about Gordie’s dream. Choose the correct name(s). a Who is in the water? ….. b Who is playing with plastic buckets? ….. c Who is lying on her back in a grey suit? ….. d Who starts repeating a poem? ….. e Who pulls Chris under the water? ….. f Who does not try to save Chris? ….. 1) Teddy and Vern 2) Chris 3) Mrs Cote, the English teacher 4) Gordie 5) little children 6) Gordie, Chris, Teddy and Vern Chapters 19 –21 10 Put these events in the correct order (1–7). a c Chris threatens Ace with his gun. b c Vern sees the body. c c Ace and his gang arrive. Ace tells the boys to leave. d c The boys continue the long walk along the railway tracks. e c Gordie says, ‘Go to hell, Ace.’ f c A thunderstorm begins. g c The boys turn over the boy’s body. c Pearson Education Limited 2008 B1402 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme Photocopiable Chapters 22–27 11 Choose the right word in italics. a Ace tells the boys he will shoot / hurt them. b Gordie / Teddy stays with Chris until the gang leaves. c Chris / Gordie falls down beside the body and starts to cry. d The boys decide to take / leave the body. e Gordie worries the most about Ray Brower’s missing bucket / shoes. f The boys arrive back in town on Saturday / Sunday morning. g When Gordie sees his mother, she is thinking about Gordie / his brother Dennis. 12 Are these sentences right (3) or wrong (7)? a Gordie tells the police about the body. c b All of the boys were hurt by Ace and his gang later that month. c c Everyone hears the boys’ story. c d The four boys remain good friends all through high school. c e Chris works hard in school and takes college courses with Gordie. c f Chris tries to stop a fight and is killed. c g Gordie becomes a lawyer. c After reading 13 At the end of the story, we learn what happened to Chris, Vern and Teddy. Look in Chapter 19 on page 51. Gordie (as the narrator) says: ‘They say the effect of events can grow larger and larger as the years pass, so who knows? If we hadn’t walked along the tracks maybe Chris and Teddy and Vern would still be alive today.’ Write about: What do you think the narrator means? Do you think the events of that weekend could have changed the lives of the boys? If so, in what way? 14 Write: Gordie talks about looking down the railway tracks in Chapter 8 on page 15. He says, ‘I’ll never forget that moment, however old I get.’ He talks about seeing the deer on the railway tracks on pages 45–46 in Chapter 16. He says he has returned to that moment at difficult times in his life. Think of an important moment in your life and answer the following questions in a paragraph: What happened? When? Where? What did you learn from this event? Why is it important to you? The Body - Activity worksheets of 2 Progress test LEVEL 5 B1402 The Body Chapters 1–6 1 Underline the mistakes in the sentences and correct them. a Gordie’s brother died a few years ago. …………………………………………………… b Ray Brower is the name of the missing man. …………………………………………………… c Chris hears his brother talking about a body. …………………………………………………… d The boys think they will be in big trouble if they find the body. …………………………………………………… e They will say they are sleeping in Vern’s house. …………………………………………………… f Gordie has a father who drinks a lot. …………………………………………………… Chapters 7–9 2 Complete the sentences with the words. track gun dump bullets shop coins tent tracks Chris meets Gordie and show him his father’s (a) ……………… . He has brought some (b) ……………… for it. Vern has put up a (c) ……………… in his back field. Chris stops Teddy from walking on the railway (d) ……………… when a train is coming. The boys go to the (e) ……………… to get some water. They toss (f ) ……………… to see who will buy some food at the (g) ……………… . Chapters 10–11 3 Who are they? Choose the correct name. Gordie Teddy Milo Chopper Vern Chris a …………… sometimes worries about scary things under his bed. b …………… looks back at Milo behind the dump fence and feels sorry for him. c …………… has strong feelings about his father. d …………… hurt himself when he ran into the fence. e …………… is good at making peace with people. f …………… calls Teddy’s father a ‘madman’. Chapters 12–14 4 Choose the right sentence. Write 1 or 2. a Teddy says they should cross the railway bridge because ….. 1) the other bridge is too far away. 2) it is safer than the other bridge. c Pearson Education Limited 2008 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme Photocopiable b c d e f Chris crosses the bridge first because ….. 1) he think it will be easy. 2) he dared the others. Gordie stops on the bridge because ….. 1) he has a feeling that a train is coming. 2) Vern is walking so slowly. Chris tells Gordie that friends ….. 1) are the most important thing. 2) can sometimes drag you down. They camp ten miles from the body because ….. 1) they don’t want to get too close to the body. 2) it is already dark. Gordie thinks about Ray Brower and feels ….. 1) scared that the boy will appear as a ghost. 2) sad that the boy is all alone. Chapters 15–18 5 Put these events in the correct order (1–7). a c The boys get leeches all over their bodies. b c Gordie sees a deer near the tracks. c c Something is screaming in the forest. d c A train goes by and wakes up the boys. e c Gordie has a strange dream about Chris. f c The boys swim in a pool of water. g c The boys take turns guarding the camp. Chapters 19–21 6 Underline the correct word or phrase. a Gordie hears thunder and feels excited / scared. b Vern / Chris is the first one to see the body. c The first thing they see when they look at the body is the boy’s foot / hand. d Gordie thinks the boy was hit by a train / killed by an animal. e Gordie get angry when Ace mentions his brother / father. f Gordie / Chris takes out the gun and points it at Ace. Chapters 22–27 7 Read each question and circle YES or NO. a Do Vern and Teddy run away when it starts to hail? YES NO b Does Chris shoot Ace? YES NO c Does Gordie tell the police about finding the body? YES NO d Do the boys sleep in the forest another night? YES NO e Is Gordie’s mother worried when he gets home? YES NO f After school started again, do Ace and his gang hurt the boys? YES NO The Body - Progress test of 1 Answer keys LEVEL 5 B1402 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme The Body Book key 1 a 3 b 2 c 2 d 3 e 2 f 1 g 2 2 a Billy b several miles from c good d teacher e before f must 3 Open answers 4 a 3 b 3 c 3 d 7 e 3 f 3 g 7 h 3 i 7 j 3 5 a He died in a Jeep accident in the army. b Seven years. c Yes, they were. d No, they weren’t. 6 Open answers 7 a 6 b 3 c 2 d 5 e 1 f 7 g 4 8 They take a gun, blankets, money and water bottles. 9–10 Open answers 11 a through b an ordinary c pleased d knows e but sympathetic f less g are h promise not to tell 12 He means he later wrote a novel about someone having night-sweats and it earned him a million dollars. 13 –14 Open answers 15 a mile b minute c track d side e train f bridge g faces h dirt i alive 16 a Chris b Gordon’s father c Chris d Mrs Simons e Vern and Teddy f Ray Brower c Pearson Education Limited 2008 17–19 Open answers 20 a woman > wild cat b Chris > Vern c dives > doesn’t dive d sees Gordon > hears the train e good > bad f very dangerous > mostly harmless g shorter > longer h know > don’t know 21 a A wild cat or other animal. b Because Castle Rock is too far away in one direction, and Ray Brower’s body is in the other direction. c Because of their conversation during the day. d The good things in life. e He cries (even though he doesn’t want to). f Because they’re hot, tired and hungry, and they have to walk further than they thought. 22 Open answers 23 a 3 b 3 c 3 d 7 e 7 f 3 g 3 h 3 i 7 24 –25 Open answers 26 a Chris to Eyeball b Ace to Chris c Teddy to Chris d Chris to Gordie e Vern to the others f Gordon’s mother to Gordon 27 a Teddy – died in a car accident. b Vern – died in a house fire. c Gordon – is a famous writer. d Chris – died in a street fight. 28–38 Open answers Discussion activities key 1–32 Open answers Activity worksheets key 1 a Castle Rock, Maine b September, 1960 c dry, hot d five, six e four f Gordie (Gordon) g Ray Brower h Vern The Body - Answer keys of 2 Answer keys LEVEL 5 B1402 PENGUIN READERS Teacher Support Programme The Body 2 a 2 b 3 c 4 d 1 3 a 4 b 6 c 2 d 7 e 1 f 5 g 3 4 a brother > father b Teddy > Chris c 13 > 30 d wild animals > Chopper the dog e good luck > bad luck 5 a 3 b 5 c 1 d 6 e 2 f 4 6 a 2 b 4 c 3 d 1 7 a YES b NO c YES d YES e NO 8 a forest b scream c ghost d wild cat e guard f dream g deer 9 a 6 b 5 c 3 d 2 e 1 f 4 10 a 7 b 3 c 5 d 1 e 6 (Note: This is strong language.) f 2 g 4 11 a hurt b Gordie c Chris d leave e bucket f Sunday g his brother Dennis 12 a 7 b 3 c 7 d 7 e 3 f 3 g 7 13 –14 Open answers c Pearson Education Limited 2008 Progress test key 1 a years > months b man > boy c Chris > Vern d in big trouble > heroes e house > (back) field f Gordie > Chris 2 a gun b bullets c tent d track e dump f coins g shop 3 a Vern b Gordie c Teddy d Chopper e Chris f Milo 4 a 1 b 2 c 1 d 2 e 1 f 2 5 a 7 b 4 c 1 d 5 e 3 f 6 g 2 6 a scared b Vern c hand d hit by a train e brother f Chris 7 a YES b NO c NO d NO e NO f YES The Body - Answer keys of 2
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