Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Legalle
Orgão: Pref. São Lourenço Sul-RS
To answer questions 31 to 40, read the text below.
Round Up: New William Hodgson Editions
The British Library's Tales of the Weird series has arguably been leading the charge in the mainstream reissuing of classic and obscure weird works, issuing thoughtfully curated collections on a near-monthly basis since July 2018. At time of writing, there have been over 60 volumes released under this imprint, with many more lined up.
Not only was a collection of William Hope Hodgson's short stories an early inclusion (The Weird Tales of William Hope Hodgson, April 2019), but Hodgson is unique in having had two of his novels issued in the same line: The House on the Borderland (October 2023) and The Night Land (May 2024), both with an introduction by Ann VanderMeer. Only a handful of novels have been published in the Tales of the Weird series (the vast majority of volumes are short story collections), so it is remarkable that two of WHH's novels have been chosen for inclusion.
Penguin books have recently gotten in on the action, launching their own Penguin Weird Fiction range in October last year. Five books were published simultaneously - Hodgson's The House on the Borderland again being included - all with cover art "inspired by 1970s Penguin genre paperbacks". This isn't the first time Borderland has been published by Penguin: it was included as part of their (seemingly inconsistently labelled) Red Classics / Gothic Classics series back in 2008. At any rate, it's great to see Hodgson back in print with such a high profile publishing house.
Fonte: https://hodgsoniana.wordpress.com/2025/06/25/round-up-new-hodgson-editions/
Identify the two correct and two wrong interpretations of the phrasal verbs used in the text and mark T (true) and F (false).
( ) The phrasal verb "lined up" in the first paragraph indicates that the upcoming books are physically standing in a straight queue at the printing press.
( ) The expression "gotten in on" in the third paragraph suggests that Penguin Books has started participating in the same profitable trend that the British Library began.
( ) The expression 'lined up' is used idiomatically to indicate that more volumes are scheduled or prepared for future release.
( ) The term "back in" in the final sentence is used to describe the physical movement of a book being placed inside a printing machine.
Which alternative CORRECTLY fills in the parenthesis above?