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2 novels found

Young People Read Jin Yong

Pantsev

114K0

This book has no political orientation. The author has solid professional skills and the content is lively and interesting. Jin Yong is known as the master of new martial arts novels. He is also a Buddhist expert, a political commentator, a Go master, a doctor of history from Cambridge University, a film screenwriter, and a newspaper critic. His lifelong habit of reading has made his martial arts novels a "treasure bag" that integrates knowledge, weapons, and allusions. Every reader can find points of interest in them. This book guides young readers to immerse themselves in it and understand the historical context, geographical features, poetry and allusions, medicine and diet, etiquette and art philosophy behind martial arts... The author integrates abstract concepts in the textbook into vivid scenes, making traditional culture truly "alive" and helping young people broaden their cognitive boundaries, build an interdisciplinary knowledge framework, cultivate cultural confidence and humanistic literacy, and lay a solid foundation for lifelong learning.

Cross Street Knight

Cross Street Knight

General Fiction

Pantsev

93K0

Introduction to "Knights of the Cross Street" Cross Street, a label preserved in history, marks the welcome and farewell, suffering and struggle in this land. Therefore, every place with a long history has cross streets. They remember the decline and decline of the countryside, the wanton prosperity of the city, and the beginning and end of each era. And I, a rural child who followed my father into the city, was pushed by my father on the speeding train of the times, from the countryside to the small town, from the small town to the provincial capital, from the capital to the foreign country. Like a knight, I indulged my senses and was ready to gallop. But if I look back, the child riding the old sow on the cross street will always be there. Migration, dispersion, joys and sorrows, we have caught up with an era, and we should annotate it. A picture of the travels of the post-70s generation, a common family history in the era of change, and a cultural contest that goes straight to the heart. Use experience as a clue, peel off the cocoon, and feel the freshness of the pulse of the times and the cruelty of blood flow in a process that seems to come naturally. There is no escape here, only remembrance and facing.