
A Story of Love, Madness and Death
About This Novel
"Stories of Love, Madness and Death" is a collection of short stories by Uruguayan writer Horacio Quiroga. It selects the author's famous work "Stories of Love, Madness and Death", the fairy tale "The Story of the Great Forest" created by the author for his children, and the author's other fables such as "Anaconda" and "Juan Darien", etc., Totaling 28 works. Quiroga is good at drawing themes from the unique social life and mysterious natural scenery of Latin America. He uses a combination of realism and modernism to depict characters and create background atmosphere, so that his works present strong colors and personalities that are completely different from those of his predecessors.
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 10d ago
After experiencing dangerous situations, this love becomes stronger. Love is both a weakness and an armor.
feather pillow
On the surface, the plot of this story is quite straightforward. Maybe there is a metaphor, she died of fear? Real threat
The puppy Alder walked lazily across the yard and out of the gate. He stopped at the edge of the pasture, stretched towards the jungle, narrowed his eyes, twitched his nose, and then sat down quietly. He saw the monotonous Chaco plains, interspersed with fields and jungles, jungles and fields, with no other colors except the pale yellow of the pastures and the cyan of the jungles. Two hundred meters away on the horizon, jungle surrounded the farm on three sides. To the west the fields opened wider and wider into glades, and inevitably drew a dark outline in the distance.
Right, v is VB, any D,
Electronics factory vE alarm G, how can the evil one eat v the day after tomorrow Fvv
Is it a fairy tale book for children?
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 10d ago
After experiencing dangerous situations, this love becomes stronger. Love is both a weakness and an armor.
feather pillow
On the surface, the plot of this story is quite straightforward. Maybe there is a metaphor, she died of fear? Real threat
The puppy Alder walked lazily across the yard and out of the gate. He stopped at the edge of the pasture, stretched towards the jungle, narrowed his eyes, twitched his nose, and then sat down quietly. He saw the monotonous Chaco plains, interspersed with fields and jungles, jungles and fields, with no other colors except the pale yellow of the pastures and the cyan of the jungles. Two hundred meters away on the horizon, jungle surrounded the farm on three sides. To the west the fields opened wider and wider into glades, and inevitably drew a dark outline in the distance.
Right, v is VB, any D,
Electronics factory vE alarm G, how can the evil one eat v the day after tomorrow Fvv
Is it a fairy tale book for children?
