
Bring Her Eyes
by Liu Cixin
About This Novel
Humans use stratiform spaceships to explore deep into the earth. A stratiform spacecraft crashed during the voyage and sank to the center of the earth. There was only a young female navigator left on the ship. She could only spend the rest of her life in the closed center of the earth...
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(57)Scraped 22d ago
It seems that this novel has been selected into the first grade Chinese language, which shows the charm of this article. This is the saddest science fiction novel I have ever read
Hey, I seem to have studied it. Liu Cixin's book is so great that he even won the Nobel Prize and was included in the text.
Isn't this the second volume of the seventh grade of junior high school?
I feel the same way, and I have never understood why others cannot understand my sensibility. Only those who have lived in a dark and narrow cabin can understand the beauty of stretching the body at will, the endless consciousness struggling in the darkness, and the flow of time and space under the sun. The real existence of dampness and coldness brought by the misty rain. Pain and sadness mean existence, and existence itself is extremely beautiful.
Highly recommended!
I have always thought that science fiction novels are cool (I don't understand them at all), but when I read this book, I felt inexplicably sad. Maybe I felt pity for the female terrestrial astronaut, maybe I was shocked and awed by the contributions that scientists have made to us. I am a first-year junior high school student, and I will study this text in the next semester. However, I did a preview in advance. I saw this article in the next Chinese textbook, so I read this article over and over again. My heart is full of awe and shock. I want to pay tribute to those scientific researchers who work day and night, make great contributions to the future of the country, and even sacrifice their youth and lives! Also pay tribute to the female terrestrial pilot in the article! Even more, I would like to pay tribute to the author of this article - Liu Cixin!
Me and her in the cage - with her eyes
Hahaha, are there any friends who were as shocked as the editor when they saw this title? Raise your hands consciously~~~ Bring her eyes... How? Say no to blood! Only after reading the beginning did I know... We don't understand the high-tech world (sigh) The soft moonlight at night tells of the heat, hardship and longing for life on earth, and also breaks the spiritual cage that imprisons "me". Yes, rather than saying that the little girl is trapped underground, it is more a metaphor for "I" being trapped by the impetuousness of gray life. --Until that song of moonlight came out of the little girl's mouth, the cage that imprisoned "my" soul was broken, and "my" spirit was freed. How many more of her are there in this world? She deserves respect and sympathy from all of us. So, please take her eyes with you, go to that drizzling grassland, and accompany her to watch the last morning she saw, a morning without sunrise. Topic discussion 1. Do you think the little girl will be rescued in the end? 2. How many people do you think are like "me" in real life and are trapped in life? Including you? Text: Mo Yuxiang
I really liked the Chinese text when I was learning it. It's really great to read the full text! It's wonderfully conceived and has a sad and depressing feeling. Highly recommended!
Don't you want to change it into a novel?
Depressed, I foolishly bought the entire book. The result is still the same one I saw before
I just taught it a while ago and I have been reviewing for the finals. I don't have time to read it. I just have time today and I read this novel. It is really well written (●'?'●)?❤
This is lesson 22 of the Chinese language book in the first volume of junior high school.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(57)Scraped 22d ago
It seems that this novel has been selected into the first grade Chinese language, which shows the charm of this article. This is the saddest science fiction novel I have ever read
Hey, I seem to have studied it. Liu Cixin's book is so great that he even won the Nobel Prize and was included in the text.
Isn't this the second volume of the seventh grade of junior high school?
I feel the same way, and I have never understood why others cannot understand my sensibility. Only those who have lived in a dark and narrow cabin can understand the beauty of stretching the body at will, the endless consciousness struggling in the darkness, and the flow of time and space under the sun. The real existence of dampness and coldness brought by the misty rain. Pain and sadness mean existence, and existence itself is extremely beautiful.
Highly recommended!
I have always thought that science fiction novels are cool (I don't understand them at all), but when I read this book, I felt inexplicably sad. Maybe I felt pity for the female terrestrial astronaut, maybe I was shocked and awed by the contributions that scientists have made to us. I am a first-year junior high school student, and I will study this text in the next semester. However, I did a preview in advance. I saw this article in the next Chinese textbook, so I read this article over and over again. My heart is full of awe and shock. I want to pay tribute to those scientific researchers who work day and night, make great contributions to the future of the country, and even sacrifice their youth and lives! Also pay tribute to the female terrestrial pilot in the article! Even more, I would like to pay tribute to the author of this article - Liu Cixin!
Me and her in the cage - with her eyes
Hahaha, are there any friends who were as shocked as the editor when they saw this title? Raise your hands consciously~~~ Bring her eyes... How? Say no to blood! Only after reading the beginning did I know... We don't understand the high-tech world (sigh) The soft moonlight at night tells of the heat, hardship and longing for life on earth, and also breaks the spiritual cage that imprisons "me". Yes, rather than saying that the little girl is trapped underground, it is more a metaphor for "I" being trapped by the impetuousness of gray life. --Until that song of moonlight came out of the little girl's mouth, the cage that imprisoned "my" soul was broken, and "my" spirit was freed. How many more of her are there in this world? She deserves respect and sympathy from all of us. So, please take her eyes with you, go to that drizzling grassland, and accompany her to watch the last morning she saw, a morning without sunrise. Topic discussion 1. Do you think the little girl will be rescued in the end? 2. How many people do you think are like "me" in real life and are trapped in life? Including you? Text: Mo Yuxiang
I really liked the Chinese text when I was learning it. It's really great to read the full text! It's wonderfully conceived and has a sad and depressing feeling. Highly recommended!
Don't you want to change it into a novel?
Depressed, I foolishly bought the entire book. The result is still the same one I saw before
I just taught it a while ago and I have been reviewing for the finals. I don't have time to read it. I just have time today and I read this novel. It is really well written (●'?'●)?❤
This is lesson 22 of the Chinese language book in the first volume of junior high school.
