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1000 words of reflections after reading "The Long Reader"

"The Long Reader" is a hardcover book written by [Germany] Bernhard Schlink and published by Yilin Publishing House. The price of this book is: 48.00 yuan, the number of pages: 245, and it is particularly meticulous. I compiled some readers’ comments from the Internet. I hope it will be helpful to everyone.

Thoughts after reading "The Long Reader" (1): Two opposite people cannot get along.

Is it more embarrassing to be an illiterate than to be a criminal? Or does Michael feel ashamed or humiliated about knowing Hannah and everything that happened between them. Their encounter was a collision of flesh and desire, or just a summer affair. No matter what, it was repeatedly engraved in the lives of the two of them. Is he betraying Hannah by denying her, or is it betrayal by saying in front of the judge that Hannah is illiterate, is he respecting her decision about the life she wants to live or talking to her. This was all about Hannah's personal freedom and dignity, and I was just a "kid" being taken advantage of. I think Michael overestimated his feelings for Hannah, maybe it was just an ignorant boy’s unique obsession and attachment to the first woman in his life. Or did he decide to record literary works for her when things changed, but he always avoided it and was unwilling to write her a letter or visit her once? "How should we face the encounter without feeling pain about everything that happened between us." It was the smell of the old lady exuding from Hannah that made Michael feel that love had passed away and that the person in front of him was no longer his sweetheart, which made Hannah not Planning to go with him.

Thoughts after reading "The Reader" (2): Everything is caused by shame

Everything in the story is caused by shame. Due to shame, the young man remained silent and struggled internally. He has been trapped in the love affair in his adolescence for many years. Due to shame, Hannah refused to let the outside world know that she was illiterate and would rather "resign herself to her fate" and serve 18 years in prison. The subtle emotions between the two people, from the initial physical desire to the later tapes of readings sent to the prison, have always been maintained in such a way that no one can tell.

Hannah’s identity as a female guard at the Auschwitz concentration camp cannot be removed. The massacre of World War II is so heavy on the entire human history. How could the two weaklings in the story be able to bear it? Well, I can’t say it, and I can’t say it. The shackles of the times and history are so powerful that they can only accept the emotions and fate of little people.

I have watched the movie earlier, and the quality is excellent. It can be called Kate Winslet's classic masterpiece after "Titanic". Of course, this movie really won her an Oscar.

Now that I have read the original novel, I still feel that the story is a superb work from its structure, relationships to ending... Sigh~

Thoughts after reading "The Reader" (3): A book I want to read in one sitting

The story between the boy Misha and the woman Hannah is very passionate and cruel. , causing people to think deeply about love, history, and politics!

I had a weekend off and worked overtime from nine o'clock in the evening after returning home, and didn't finish reading the whole book until midnight. This is also the only novel that I have read in one sitting in the past few years. It usually takes a week or half a month to finish a book.

Many people recommend "The Thorn Birds", "Wuthering Heights", "Jane Eyre", "Pride and Prejudice", "Gone with the Wind", "La Traviata", etc. as must-read romance novels. I must add The Reader!

Isn’t love just like what is described in this poem?

When we open our hearts

You open to me, I open to you

When we are addicted

You are addicted to me, I Addicted to you

When we disappear

You are in my heart, I am in yours

From now on

I am still me

p>

You are still you

Thoughts after reading "The Reader" (4): Reading should appear openly in your world

When it comes to readers, what comes to mind most Still with the slogan "Reading aloud to move people's hearts", celebrities and ordinary people alike are sharing their thoughts and stories through reading aloud. Many touching scenes and experiences are dazzlingly reflected on this stage. I watched a few episodes and then missed it due to work, but this format of program still left me with more impact and expectations.

The book introduced in this article may have been turned into a movie. There is no doubt that in the movie, the rendering is more direct and specific, and the plot is more compact, unlike the novel which is full of speculative flavor. I might like the movie more. One is Hannah crying in the church, the other is Hannah stepping on the book and hanging herself, and the third is Misha finally confessing her story to her daughter. There is no doubt that the movie is better in terms of story expression.

What is the story of "The Reader"?

The bestseller of this book in the international market can only be compared with that of Patrick Suskind's novel "Perfume" published in 1985. As for German literature, the critical enthusiasm it aroused may only be matched by Nobel Prize winners Günter Grass and Heinrich B?ll.

——"The Guardian"

Different from perfume, this book begins with the sudden love of a 15-year-old boy, Misha, who feels lost and worried about gains and losses, and then retreats silently. What kind of secrets are wrapped in love? Little by little, the secrets are revealed, and it turns out that Hannah, whom she once loved, was the devil in World War II. The most profound impression is Hannah's "illiteracy shame". In order to cover up the shame of being illiterate, Hannah chose to exchange for a lifetime of freedom. Later, he was saved in reading aloud, and even ended his life in a book.

Does Misha really understand Hannah? During the trial, what he was thinking in his heart was: "Once she goes to jail, she will completely disappear from my world and my life. I want her to stay far away, I want her to be out of reach, I want her to "It became a pure memory." As a law student, he knew very well that Hannah was guilty, but the inescapable relationship between "falling in love with a criminal and making me guilty" also made it difficult for him to calm down. . He was deeply entangled, and he did not reveal the truth about Hannah's illiteracy to the judge because he respected Hannah's wishes. He is escaping from the memories and involvement related to Hannah, but as a "professor of legal history", he reads aloud at night and becomes Hannah's reader. What on earth he is doing is intriguing.

He finally went to visit the prison but was forced to do so. Hannah's body odor became "old woman's body odor." She no longer deliberately conceals it, just like covering up her illiterate status, just to maintain her dignity. Prison life took away Hannah, who loved to be clean and even had a mysophobia. She "suddenly gave up everything" and she smelled bad. I think Hannah is making final preparations to meet Misha, and Misha also unintentionally puts Hannah in a very important position. At first, it was just fruitless lust, but in the end it sublimated into something similar to love. of crystallization.

I believe what Mo Yan said to me, "The best novel must make people want to cry without tears." - Writer Bi Feiyu

This book is about human nature Exploration, through the extension of books, fuels our questioning of the past. If people repent, can they be given the dignity and forgiveness they deserve? It is so easy for us to hate someone and come from the heart, but it is very difficult to love someone. , but physical proximity is simple. There are also constraints from objective conditions. Of course, while I was reading this book, I was still thinking about the keyword reading aloud, or should I think about the way reading aloud should not persist in our own world?

If there is such a person, he will read to you for many years, raise his head and read the bright moon, and travel thousands of miles to read the chapter. It is also an encounter.