Daudet was born in a shabby silk merchant family in Provence, France. He began to make a living since he was a child. Under the influence of his mother, he began literary creation at the age of 17. He wrote thirteen novels, one script and four short story collections in his lifetime, and was known as the "French Dickens".
Introduction to Alphonse Daudet Alphonse Daudet (Alphonse Daudet, May 13, 1840 - December 14, 1897), a native of Provence, France, was an outstanding patriotic writer. He began literary creation in 1857 and published a collection of short stories "Mill Notes" at the age of 26. Two years later, he published his first full-length autobiographical novel "Little Things". This novel is Doude's masterpiece, which focuses on his harmless irony and implicit sentimentality, which is the so-called 's "tearful smile." Daudet is therefore known as the "Dickens of France". He wrote 13 novels, 1 screenplay and 4 short story collections throughout his life. Among them, "The Last Lesson" and "The Siege of Berlin" enjoy a high reputation due to their profound patriotic content and superb artistic skills, and have become masterpieces of short stories in the world. Books are your best friends. When you encounter any difficulties in life, you can turn to it for help, and it will never abandon you. As long as the people who have lost their country and become slaves remember their language firmly, it is like holding a key to the prison door. If you want to love your own value, you have to create value for the world. Hatred is the anger of the weak, and gluttony begins with no longer being hungry. When a nation becomes a slave, as long as it keeps its language well, it is like holding the key to the prison cell. Women's eyes are always sharper. Even the most honest woman who is completely ignorant of the bad things in the world sometimes suddenly flashes of amazing wisdom.