具体描述
The energetic narrator of Me Counting Time and Me on the Map is back, this time introducing young readers to the units of measure. What’s the difference between a cup and an ounce? What gets measured in bushels and when do you use a scale? Easy-to-understand text and playful corresponding illustrations teach children the differences between wet and dry measurements, weight, size, and length. And all information is conveyed in a unique kid’s-eye perspective, using everyday objects and situations. Me and the Measure of Things makes measurement fun–and comprehensible!
From the Hardcover edition.
《星际迷航:失落的方舟》 A Novel of High-Stakes Exploration and Ancient Mysteries Synopsis The year is 2385. The Federation, having stabilized after the tumultuous events of the previous century, is cautiously pushing the boundaries of known space. A newly commissioned, state-of-the-art exploration vessel, the U.S.S. Odyssey (NCC-80100), under the command of the seasoned but intensely pragmatic Captain Eva Rostova, is tasked with a deep-space survey mission into the largely uncharted Nebula of Aethel. Their primary objective is to follow up on faint, decades-old sensor readings suggesting the presence of a unique, non-baryonic energy source—a potential game-changer for warp technology. The Odyssey is a melting pot of talent: Chief Science Officer Dr. Aris Thorne, a brilliant but highly controversial xenolinguist obsessed with pre-warp civilizations; First Officer Commander T’Rell, a Vulcan whose emotional restraint is constantly tested by the unpredictable nature of the mission; and Chief Engineer Lieutenant Commander Jax “Wrench” Riley, whose unconventional problem-solving skills keep the temperamental experimental warp core running. The initial weeks of the mission proceed routinely, characterized by minor stellar phenomena and the mundane cataloging of gaseous anomalies. However, the routine shatters when the Odyssey crosses the outer boundary of the Aethel Nebula. They encounter a massive, perfectly spherical void—a region of space where all known physical laws appear to bend or fail entirely. Within this void, they detect a faint, repeating energy signature that pulses with the regularity of a heartbeat, seemingly emanating from a structure far older than any recorded Federation technology. The Discovery Following the signature deeper into the void, the Odyssey discovers not a natural phenomenon, but an artifact: a colossal, derelict megastructure, kilometers in diameter, built from an obsidian-like material that defies standard spectral analysis. It is clearly artificial, yet displays architectural motifs that bear no resemblance to any known civilization—neither Federation, Romulan, Cardassian, nor the long-vanished Iconians. Rostova orders a cautious approach. Initial probes return fragmented data: internal atmosphere composed of complex hydrocarbons, gravity stabilizers operating at minimal capacity, and power conduits still faintly active after what sensor readings estimate to be millions of years of dormancy. Thorne, electrified by the implications, immediately theorizes this could be the resting place of the Architects, a rumored precursor race whispered about in obscure archaeological texts. Against the more cautious advice of T’Rell, Rostova authorizes a small away team—Thorne, Riley, and tactical officer Lieutenant Shara K’lar—to beam aboard the structure, which they tentatively name The Ark. Inside the Silence The interior of The Ark is a labyrinth of vast, silent chambers, illuminated only by the faint emergency lighting powered by the structure itself. The team finds evidence of advanced technology seamlessly integrated with biological components. Doors open not through manual interface, but through nuanced shifts in localized gravitational fields. They navigate through halls filled with crystalline structures that seem to record light and sound from epochs past. The true nature of The Ark begins to reveal itself when Thorne accesses a central repository—a vast, organic database. He deciphers portions of the alien language, realizing The Ark was not a ship or a station, but a preservation vault. Its original inhabitants were fleeing an existential threat, an energy wave originating from the galactic core, capable of erasing complex organic and technological signatures across vast swathes of space. They didn’t conquer or explore; they entombed themselves, hoping to ride out the extinction event. However, the data reveals a terrifying complication. The original inhabitants did not simply put themselves to sleep. They initiated a 'Seed Protocol': transferring their collective consciousness, their entire history and knowledge, into the Ark’s core processing unit, intending to reawaken when the threat passed. The Awakening and the Consequence The closer the away team gets to the core, the more erratic the Odyssey's systems become. The Ark is not inert; it is merely dormant, and the presence of new organic life (the away team) has triggered its automated resurrection sequence. When Thorne mistakenly interacts with a primary control nexus, he inadvertently bypasses millennia of safeties. The energy signature that drew them across the nebula flares violently. The Ark begins to power up, initiating a massive energy surge that threatens to overload the Odyssey's warp core, potentially tearing the ship apart. Simultaneously, the ancient consciousness within the core awakens, flooding the Odyssey's comms system with sensory data—a cacophony of ancient fear, desperation, and raw intellect that threatens to drive the crew insane. T’Rell, struggling to maintain logical command while the bridge crew battles psychic interference, realizes the threat is twofold: the physical overload, and the psychological contamination. Rostova is faced with an impossible choice: retreat and leave a fully powered, unpredictable ancient vessel capable of immense destruction near Federation space, or risk everything to neutralize the awakening consciousness before it fully assimilates The Ark's systems and uses them as a launching platform. The Race Against Time Riley and a skeleton engineering crew must execute a desperate maneuver: utilize the Odyssey's experimental phase emitters to introduce a specific, carefully calculated harmonic frequency directly into The Ark’s power matrix, hoping to induce a controlled shutdown rather than catastrophic overload. Meanwhile, Thorne, deep within the vault, must confront the awakened entity. He discovers that the extinction event the Architects fled from never truly ended; it merely mutated. The energy wave they feared is a cyclical cosmic event, and The Ark’s reawakening has inadvertently alerted whatever caused that original catastrophe to their location once again. The climax sees Rostova authorizing a final, high-risk gamble: firing a targeted quantum torpedo not at The Ark itself, but at a specific anchor point in the surrounding nebula, designed to momentarily destabilize the spatial void and disrupt the Ark's primary power coupling just as Riley initiates the shutdown sequence. The result is not a neat victory. The Ark is silenced, its core consciousness seemingly neutralized, but the structure itself is fractured, its ancient secrets spilled across the void in chaotic bursts of radiation. Rostova manages to pull the Odyssey out of the nebula, battered but intact. They return to Starfleet with impossible data, confirming the existence of a civilization that solved the problem of eternal dormancy, only to face a greater, cyclical horror that awaits them all in the darkness between galaxies. The journey has not only pushed the limits of Federation technology but has unearthed a cosmic warning that Federation leadership is ill-prepared to accept. The question remains: what did the Architects truly leave behind, and are they truly gone?