Barrons Ielts -book And Audio Cd- -

“Let’s move to Part 2. Describe a gift you gave to someone recently.”

Finally, the Speaking. This was her fear. But the book’s audio CD had a special track: a mock examiner asking real questions. She pressed play.

The next morning, she walked into the exam hall with her transparent pencil case and her ID. The real audio began. The same kind of British voice. “Section 1…”

And Nina smiled. If you’d like, I can also create a practice story with IELTS-style questions (listening or reading) based on that narrative—just let me know. Barrons IELTS -Book and Audio CD-

Nina stared at the thick, glossy cover of her Barron’s IELTS book. The familiar logo, the promise of “ 6 full-length Academic tests, Audio CD included, Strategies for all sections ”—it had been her companion for three months.

She spoke for two minutes without stopping. Her voice cracked once, but she kept going. The CD’s timer beeped. She’d done it.

She flipped to Practice Test 4, the one she’d been saving. The Listening section came first. She slid the Audio CD into her old laptop, the same one she’d used since university. The narrator’s familiar, crisp British voice filled her small apartment: “Section 1. You will hear a woman phoning a travel agency…” “Let’s move to Part 2

Nina’s pen moved quickly. Name: Mrs. J. Hargreaves. Date: 14th March. Preferred seat: aisle. She’d learned the tricks from the book’s strategy pages: predict the word type before you listen, don’t leave any blanks, watch for paraphrasing. By the end of Section 4—a dense lecture on urban beekeeping—she’d filled all 40 answer spaces.

Tonight was the final rehearsal. Her real exam was in twelve hours.

The Writing section was open-ended. She chose Task 2: “Some people believe that unpaid community service should be a compulsory part of high school programs. To what extent do you agree or disagree?” She wrote a clear thesis, two body paragraphs with examples (a local food bank, a park cleanup), and a balanced conclusion. She’d memorized the Barron’s “band 9” vocabulary but used it only where natural: beneficial, mandatory, foster civic responsibility. But the book’s audio CD had a special

Next, the Reading. The Barron’s book had taught her to skim, scan, and not panic at words like “photosynthesis” or “neoclassical economics.” She finished the three passages (a history of the bicycle, a psychology experiment on delayed gratification, an article on desert architecture) in 55 minutes. True, False, Not Given —she smiled. Those were no longer her enemy.

She checked the answer key. 36 out of 40. Her best yet.

“Let’s talk about where you live. Do you live in a house or an apartment?”