When I Was Young I Thought Money Was Everything: Oscar Wilde's Trilogy

When I Was Young I Thought Money Was Everything: Oscar Wilde's Trilogy

by (uk) Oscar Wilde

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About This Novel

This book selects three classic works of "Wilde's tragic aesthetics". The first "Collection of Wilde's Fairy Tales": these nine fairy tales put Wilde into the world of fairy tale masters. The story and metaphor of "The Nightingale and the Rose" are known to the world. The second "The Picture of Dorian Gray": It is Wilde's only novel and the evidence that sent Wilde to prison. The third book, "From the Depths": a long letter to his lover that exposes the soul like scraping bones and flesh, is also the last work in Wilde's life, and was named "100 greatest non-fiction works". These three works are not only Wilde's masterpieces in the literary sense, but also "fateful" works that connect Wilde's life. Readers, please follow the short introduction and translation postscript that are interspersed between each work. In this way, from fairy tales to long letters, you can gradually penetrate into his ideological world step by step, and read all the heartbreak of his life in one book.

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