
Light Classic: Food for the World
About This Novel
"The Food of the World" is a series of poetic fragments written by Gide after he traveled to North Africa and Italy, using his wanderings on the road as a clue, using a virtual goddess as the object of his conversation, describing exotic customs, expressing his feelings about life, and combining traditional short poems, odes, melody and other forms. In the book, Gide calls with passion to measure the earth with feet and expresses his true feelings with words. He despised traditional morality and advocated freedom of individual behavior. He especially emphasized people's strong feelings about nature and life, and used this feeling as spiritual food. This book can be described as Gide's own passionate spiritual monologue, and is regarded as "the Bible of a restless generation." Thirty-eight years later, Gide, who had entered his twilight years, once again wrote "New Food", once again promoting the power of "sensibility" and praising the sacred passion of life like religion.
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