Embark
ចាប់ផ្តើម break ពេលសម្រាក់ repudiate បដិសេដមិនទទួលយក
Celebrity ជនល្បីល្បាញ tenacious តស៊ូ protagonist តួឯក
Ethical ត្រឹមត្រូវតាមសិលធ៌ម dilemma ទ្វេគ្រោះ
Endure
នៅស្ថិតស្ថេរ Epic វីរកថា
Edna
Ferber (1887-1968) was a popular American novelist in the first half of the
twentieth century. She embarked on her career by working as a newspaper reporter in
Wisconsin and soon began writing novels. Her first novel, Dawn O’Hara, the Girl
Who Laughed, was published in 1911, when she was only twenty-four years old.
Her
big break came with the novel So Big (1924), which was awarded
the Pulitzer Prize in Literature. The main conflict in the novel is between a
mother who places a high value on hard work and honor and a son who repudiates his mother’s values, instead preferring the easier
path to fortune and celebrity. Like many of Ferber’s novels, this novel features a tenacious female protagonist with
strong character who struggles to deal with ethical dilemmas about the importance of status and money.
Probably
the best known of Ferber’s novels was Show Boat (1926), which tells the story
of a Southern woman married to a charismatic but irresponsible man who leaves
her with a daughter she must take great pains to support. In 1927, the novel
was made into a musical that has endured to the
present.
Other
well-known novels by Ferber include Cimarron (1930) and Giant (1952), both of
which were made into movies. These were epic novels
about the settlement and growth of the West, centering on strong female lead
characters who marry men lacking the same strength of character.
Extracted from the book of LONGMAN Preparation Course for the TOEFL Test and translated by Ty Theavy
Extracted from the book of LONGMAN Preparation Course for the TOEFL Test and translated by Ty Theavy
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