Current location - Quotes Website - Excellent quotations - Read tabloid books
Read tabloid books

Read the tabloid books as follows:

1. "Grimm's Fairy Tales". The German folk literature collected, compiled and processed by the Brothers Grimm is a classic of fairy tales in the world.

2. Thoughts after reading "Grimm's Fairy Tales". "Grimm's Fairy Tales" was written by the German Brothers Grimm, and is also named after them. Among them, "Cinderella" is a work that everyone is familiar with, showing Cinderella's kindness and beauty.

3. "Aesop's Fables". It is said to have been written by Aesop, an ancient Greek slave who was freed in the sixth century BC. It collects ancient Greek folk tales, and adds Indian, Arabic and Christian stories, totaling 357 chapters.

4. Thoughts after reading Aesop’s Fables. Aesop's fables are a treasure in ancient Greek literature. For thousands of years, they have been loved by people for their unique wisdom and artistic charm and have been passed down through the ages.

5. "The Life of Pi". Written by Jan Martel, the novel describes the magical story of an Indian boy who was reborn after drifting in the Pacific for 227 days with a Bengal tiger. It is gripping and fascinating. Whether it is the open ending or the novel's presentation of faith, survival, and even the relationship between man and the world, it will become a question that every reader will ponder.

6. "Water Drops in the Forest". Written by Mi Purish, the work takes "man and nature" as the theme. The writing is clear and smooth, the artistic conception is meaningful, full of poetry, and it also contains a kind of musical rhythm, which makes people put it down after reading it.

7. "The Complete Works of Lu Xun". Written by Lu Xun.

8. "The Little Prince". Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, a fairy tale-like philosophy book, is also a fairy tale for adults. The whole book uses the experience of the little prince as a clue, and through the growth story of the little prince, it implies the absurdity and absurdity of the adult world.

9. "Charlotte's Web". Written by EB White, this is a fairy tale describing the deep friendship between Charlotte the pig and Charlotte the spider. Charlotte used her wisdom and web-weaving skills to help the piglet avoid being slaughtered. Charlotte felt happy and satisfied because she established a friendship with the piglet.