Bog'liq @ieltsbank Cambridge English Exam Booster for Advanced
narrator: Now listen again.
narrator: Track 6. Listening Part 2, worksheet 3 narrator: you will hear a talk by a woman called Ellie Matthews about her life working as a writer and illustrator of children’s books. For questions 1–8, complete the sentences with a word or short phrase. woman: It’s a pleasure to be here and tell you
about my life as an illustrator and
2a 1 a thoroughly/totally
b pretty/fairly
c sort of/kind of
2 a completely/absolutely b rather/somewhat
c virtually/almost
3 a slightly/a bit
b terribly/awfully
c generally/mostly
2b 1 awfully
2 rather
3 kind of
4 thoroughly 5 almost
3 1 unbelievably
2 loneliness
3 passionately
4 significance
5 noticeable
6 unemployed
7 existence
8 imperfect
9 disadvantaged
Listening Part 2:3 1 1 imagination
2 advertising agency
3 travel brochures
4 red hair
5 letters
6 open spaces
7 paper
8 wisdom
children’s author … a profession I really
just fell into. It’s not as if my art teacher
or parents spotted any artistic skills in
me when I was a young girl. They tended
to focus on my vivid imagination … I
was always entertaining my friends with
outrageous stories and so not really seen
as a good influence at all!
However, I loved painting and opted
to attend Art College. By graduation
I’d accumulated a sizeable portfolio
of work to showcase my talents and
applied for jobs. I remember one was a
position at a major art gallery; I didn’t get
it – fortunately as it turns out, but I felt
crushed to be rejected for that and for
a role at a big advertising agency. I do
sometimes wonder how differently things
might have panned out for me.
Anyway, I earned virtually nothing for
two years, just bits and pieces doing
illustrations for magazines and some work
on a children’s comic. The only financially
rewarding thing I did in those early years
as an illustrator was for travel brochures,
but I wasn’t enamoured by the idea of
doing that forever.
Meanwhile, I’d been writing and drawing
pictures for a children’s book of my own
about a girl called Carly. I sent the finished
manuscript to various publishers and was
stunned one day to hear that one of them
wanted to publish it. To my amazement,
the first edition of Carly flew off the
shelves in bookshops. I think it was her
red hair that made her such a distinctive
character. She was a skinny little girl
with super-thick glasses − somewhat
based on my schoolgirl self. One source
of inspiration for things she did and
felt was going through letters written
to my grandmother by my mum when
I was young. They stirred my own vivid
recollections … like reading old diaries I
guess, where the mention of some event
or person triggers memories of a whole
period of childhood.
Anyway, after Carly, I left Britain for the
USA. I’d been taken there a lot as a
child – my mother’s parents lived there.
I don’t deal well with the cold in Britain,
and I loved the friendliness over there.
In addition, I’ve always adored its open
spaces, and that’s what influenced me to
make the move to live and work there,
rather than the weather. It’s just so vast.
I now share an apartment in New England
with my husband and kids. In my studio