答案:B,E
統計:A:20,B:87,C:19,D:39,E:75
難度:適中
【不叫賭俠的陳小刀】評論
The booth he built housed only an old dial phone with a disconnected phone line.
【水超人】評論
The idea for the wind phone was first brought forth by a Japanese garden designer named Itaru Sasaki, who was grieving over the death of his cousin in 2010, before the tsunami. Feeling that he needed a private space to help him navigate through the sorrow, Sasaki positioned a booth where he could “speak” to the dead relative. The booth he built housed only an old dial phone with a disconnected phone line. When he stepped into the booth, he could pick up the phone to call his cousin, telling him how he was, and how he missed him. Sasaki stated in an interview: “Because my thoughts couldn’t be passed on through a regular phone line, I wanted them to be carried on the wind.” Hence, the wind phone allows Sasaki to create a one way conversation with deep, soulful personal meaning, and renders the grieving process more manageable for him.