Resource link:
Link:/s/1ja6vhpxzqed7 _ 4ir6uyemg
Extraction code: wws7? Title: Pilgrimage to Tinkexi
Author: [America] Anne Dillard
Translator: Yu Youshan
Douban score: 8.3
Press: Guangxi Normal University Press
Publication year: 20 15-6
Page count: 330
Content introduction:
Birds fly casually, like the curl of stems and the light of stars.
The Pilgrimage to Tinksey records a year's life in the mountains of Dillard. Every page is a beautiful mystery, as if you have read the Secret of Creation for a whole year: birds in the air, plants on the ground, stars in the universe, pens and pens are all random, but they are full of exquisite beauty everywhere.
She wrote what she saw in her eyes, but she often made deeper associations in her letters. From the silkworm moth with big eyes, she wrote about a cell in its wet heart, where there will be a swaying forest; Write about the vitality of trees: a big elm tree can grow 6 million leaves in a season, which is very complicated, but effortless. And she laughed at herself: "I can't even do one."
She witnessed the cruelty of creation, and parasites ate the host from the stomach. The inheritance of life is based on such a life-and-death struggle. It's still rubbish. The insects in those flies have laid thousands of eggs and died countless times. Only one of them survived.
In the author's works, nature is both frightening and full of infinite compassion, and if you can have a pair of observant eyes, you will save yourself a "beautiful day in your life".
Pilgrimage to Tinker Creek is a model of contemporary natural literature and widely selected as a textbook by American universities and middle schools. Critics think this book is better than Thoreau's Walden, while others claim that it is comparable to Fabres's Insect. For Dillard, this is a free and bold confrontation with the greatest theme of life and death in the world with her young and unrestrained mind of 26 years old.
Since the publication of Pilgrimage to Tinkerbrook, Anne? The name Dillard stands for the best writing.
About the author:
Writer, poet, naturalist, master of language. 1945 was born in a wealthy family in Pennsylvania, USA. He loved reading since childhood and dabbled in a wide range. Under the influence of her parents, from piano, painting and dance lessons to collecting rocks and beetles, her childhood was intertwined with endless creativity and exploration of the environment. 1968, she graduated from Hollins University in Virginia, and her graduation thesis was Thoreau's Walden Lake, which laid a lifelong writing direction. After graduation, Dillard wrote poems and painted oil paintings, and at the same time worked for Johnson's poverty alleviation project.
197 1 year, after suffering from an almost fatal pneumonia, Dillard lived in Tinker Creek, Virginia for one year and had a profound experience of life. This experience led to the publication of Pilgrimage to Tinker Creek, which won her a Pulitzer Prize at the age of 29 and caused great repercussions in American literary circles, and its influence is still enduring today.
Dillard is a prolific columnist for Harper's Market, The Atlantic and other magazines. His works involve prose, poetry, novels and letters, all of which point to the core of life. In addition to Pilgrimage to the Creek won the Pulitzer Prize for Literature in 1975, the memoir American Childhood was shortlisted for the American National Book Award, Teaching Hard Rock to Speak was the best work of the Boston Globe in recent ten years, and the novel The Metri Family was the only finalist for the 2007 International Dublin Prize for Literature.
She lives in new york. No more traveling, no more meeting strangers, no more signing books, no more giving interviews, no more writing prefaces for people, no more appearing on TV, no more trusting Wikipedia. There are only two public readings every year.