Prime Time 6, Coursebook mit Audio-CD und DVD

Uglies e novel Uglies takes place three hundred years in the future. Tally Youngblood is about to turn 16, and she can hardly wait for her birthday. All teenagers get operated on when they turn 16. ey are turned from an ugly – a normal person – into a pretty with a perfect face and body. All they do a†er their operation is have fun. But then Tally meets Shay, and Shay doesn’t want to be operated on. She disappears to the Smoke where unoperated people live, out in the wild and far away from New Pretty Town. Tally is forced to ’nd Shay for Dr Cable of Special Circumstances (the secret police) – or she won’t get her own operation. So T ally goes on a long journey to the Smoke and ’nally ’nds her friend Shay. Reading: Uglies – Part 1 a) Read this extract and highlight all the words and expressions that refer to the looks of people. b) When you have finished make a list, group the words and find titles for your categories. 15–17 3.17–3.19 1 “Come on, I’ll take you down to the library. You’ve got to meet the Boss,” Shay said. Œe Boss wasn’t really in charge here, Shay explained. He just acted like it, especially to newbies. But he was in command of the library, the largest of the buildings in the settlement’s central square. Œe familiar smell of dusty books overwhelmed Tally at the library door, and as she looked around, she realised that books were pretty much all the library had. No big airscreen, not even private workscreens. Just mismatched desks and chairs and rows and rows of bookshelves. Shay led her to the centre of it all, where a round kiosk was inhabited by a small gure talking on an old-fashioned handphone. As they drew closer, Tally felt her heart starting to pound. She’d been dreading what she was about to see. Œe Boss was an old ugly. Tally had spotted a few from a distance on the way in, but had managed to turn her eyes away. But here was the wrinkled, veined, discoloured, shu¥ing, horric truth, right before her eyes. His milky eyes glared at them as he berated whoever was on the phone, in a rattling voice and waved one claw at them to go away. Shay giggled and pulled her toward the shelves. “He’ll get to us eventually. Œere’s something I wanna show you rst.” “Œat poor man … ” “Œe Boss? Pretty wild, huh? He’s, like, forty! Wait until you talk to him.” Tally swallowed, trying to erase the image of his sagging features from her mind. Œese people were insane to tolerate that, to want it. “But his face … ,” Tally said. “Œat’s nothing. Check these out.” Shay sat her down at a table, turned to a shelf, and pulled out a handful of volumes in protective covers. She plonked them in front of Tally. “Books on paper? What about them?” “Not books. Œey’re called magazines,” Shay said. She opened one and pointed. Its strangely glossy pages were covered with pictures. Of people. Uglies. Tally’s eyes widened as Shay turned the pages, pointing and giggling. She’d never seen so many wildly di—erent faces before. Mouths and eyes and noses of every imaginable shape, all combined insanely on people of every age. And the bodies. Some were grotesquely fat, or weirdly overmuscled, or uncomfortably thin, and almost all of them had wrong, ugly proportions. But instead of being ashamed of their deformities, the people were laughing and kissing and posing, as if all the pictures had been taken at some huge party. “Who are these freaks?” “Œey aren’t freaks,” Shay said. “Œe weird thing is, these are famous people.” “Famous for what? Being hideous?” “No. Œey’re sports stars, actors, artists. Œe men with stringy hair are musicians, I think. Œe really ugly ones are politicians, and someone told me the fatties are mostly comedians.” “Œat’s funny, as in strange,” Tally said. “So this is what people looked like before the rst pretty? How could anyone stand to open their eyes?” “Yeah. It’s scary at rst. But the weird thing is, if you keep looking at them, you kind of get used to it.” 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 135 Nur zu Prüfzwecken – Eigentum des Verlags öbv

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