What foreign classics do you think you must know? Which one do you like best? What moved you, Sister Qing?

Reading is like eating, you can't be partial to food. Therefore, while understanding China classics, we should also read some foreign classics appropriately. Because foreign literature and China have different cultural backgrounds, they are definitely different in language expression and description of human nature, and the author is influenced by the background of the times, so the contents contained in the book will be very different. But these are not what we can immediately understand. The greatness of writers lies in that they wrote about the pain we were about to face hundreds of years ago. Therefore, while we should read more books, we should read intensively and read well, and we will find that these books you have read are all guiding you how to live.

Then let me talk about the foreign literature I have seen, the dance of Haruki Murakami! Dance! Dance! There are The Catcher in the Rye and Jane Eyre, as well as The Dedication of Suspect X by Keigo Higashino and The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by Conan Doyle, as well as La Traviata, which is being watched these days.

Then I said three of my favorites and analyzed them.

The first is "Dance! Dance! Dance! The protagonist here is the same person as Haruki Murakami's other work "The Adventure of Looking for Sheep". The novel tells that I met the lonely girl Xue, her mother Yu and her boyfriend Dick, but the kind Dick was killed in a car accident. And I spent a terrible time in the shadow of death, and finally fell in love with a hotel girl. My favorite plot is the part where Wu Fantian kills the call girl because of psychological distortion and finally commits suicide by jumping into the sea. We can feel the psychological distortion, spiritual loneliness and fragile life in capitalist society, which leads people to think about the real society and reflect on human nature. One sentence deeply touched me: once you die, you will never lose anything. This is the beginning of death.

The second book is The Catcher in the Rye. I first read this book because I like its name. Once I started, I couldn't wait to continue reading. I think what moved me most was this sentence: I have been imagining many children playing games in the wheat field in my mind. There are thousands of children, nothing else-no other adults, I mean, except me. I'm standing on the edge of this broken cliff, and all I have to do is catch every child who runs to the cliff-I mean, if they don't look at the direction, I have to come out there and catch them. This is what I do all day. I will be a good girl. Horton, the hero of the book, is a villain, and I sympathize with him. His character was influenced by capitalist society. Although he has an ugly side, he also tries to resist the reality. I also want to pursue my own ideals. School teachers and parents forced him to study in order to get ahead, and he didn't want to go along with them. This is the true portrayal of capitalist society!

The third book is Jane Eyre, a foreign literature that I first came into contact with. The work tells the story of an English woman who became an orphan from an early age, constantly pursued freedom and dignity, persisted in herself, and finally achieved happiness through various hardships. The author Bronte's parents died when she was a child, and she was short and unattractive. I feel that Jane Eyre in the story is actually like writing about myself. Although humble, but self-esteem, but also to pursue women's equality. There is a sentence in the book that can express Jane Eyre's pursuit of equality and strong self-esteem: If God gives me wealth and beauty, I will make it as difficult for you to leave me as it is for me to leave you now. God didn't do this, our souls are equal, just like the two of us walked through the grave and stood at God's feet, equal to each other-we are!

After reading this book, as a woman, I am very encouraged. Because I saw a woman's persistence in life and the pursuit of equal love from the book. The heroine has a shining light, which is worth learning!