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"Eight Literature Lessons for Children from Mo Yan" Author: Mo Yan Zhejiang Literature and Art Publishing House
"Eight Literature Lessons for Children from Mo Yan" Author: Mo Yan Zhejiang Literature and Art Publishing House
Description
Introduction · · · · · ·
China's first Nobel Prize winner in literature takes you into the world of literature
Famous authors and teachers jointly recommend 32 beautiful articles in eight units
Special-grade teachers lead the selection, appreciation and reading assistance of famous Chinese teachers
Sincerely recommended by Cao Wenxuan, Bi Feiyu and Shen Shixi
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This book contains eight literary enlightenment lessons for children by Mo Yan, China's first Nobel Prize winner in Literature and a world-class writer. It is a reader of the works of Nobel Prize winners in Literature suitable for primary and secondary school students, and is also a reference book for frontline teachers to use in teaching practice and parents to use in parent-child education.
Led by nationally renowned special-grade teachers, the book selects 32 chapters from Mo Yan's vast works such as prose, speeches, and novels that are suitable for children to read, which will help improve children's Chinese reading, appreciation, and writing skills, as well as broaden their horizons in understanding the world. According to different themes, the chapters are divided into 8 units and guided and appreciated. At the same time, each unit is supplemented with a group of Mo Yan's wonderful sentences describing scenes, objects, narratives, people, and psychology, so as to enrich children's reading experience.
The 8 units of this book are: 1. Wildness of Childhood; 2. Adventures in Dreams; 3. Folk Food; 4. Animal Epics; 5. Family Love; 6. Reading Past; 7. Travel Experience; 8. My Speech. Each unit consists of "Unit Introduction", four works by Mo Yan, and "Learning to Write from Mo Yan". There is a reading guide in front of each Mo Yan's work, with word annotations and marginal notes, and "Famous Teacher Appreciation" at the end of the text.
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Recommended by experts
Many of Mo Yan's descriptions of the touch, smell, and hearing of things are derived from his feelings and imaginations about the world in his youth. They contain the fullness and vitality of a young boy's original experience, and of course are also filled with the soaring imagination and thorough linguistic pleasure of an excellent writer.
——Cao Wenxuan (famous writer, winner of the Hans Christian Andersen Award, editor-in-chief of the national unified Chinese textbooks for junior high schools and primary schools)
Reading Mo Yan is beneficial to seeing, listening, opening up the mind, and releasing oneself.
Mo Yan depicts the world of adults, but his way of perception is often childlike. Rather than saying that Mo Yan retains a childlike innocence, it is better to say that this is a gift.
——Bi Feiyu (famous writer, winner of the Mao Dun Literature Prize)
Mo Yan, a world-class writer, is not only good at exploring the richness of human nature by writing about people, but is also good at writing about animals. He can write about animals like people, making them feel happy, angry, sad, and happy just like people. But what is even more rare is that he can also write about people like animals, making you feel that people and animals are actually part of nature.
——Shen Shixi (Children's literature writer, King of Chinese animal novels)
About the Author
Mo Yan
A native of Gaomi, Shandong Province, he is the first famous Chinese writer to win the Nobel Prize in Literature.
In addition to the Nobel Prize in Literature, Mo Yan has won other awards including the Mao Dun Literature Prize, the Chinese Literature Media Award•Outstanding Achievement Award, the World Chinese Novel Award•Dream of the Red Chamber Award, the United Literature Award and other domestic literary awards, as well as important international awards such as the French Laure Bataillon Foreign Literature Prize, the Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters of France, the Italian Nonino International Literature Prize, the Japanese Fukuoka Asian Culture Grand Prize, and the American Newman Chinese Literature Award.
His major works include 11 novels, including Red Sorghum, Garlic Ballads, Wine Country, Big Breasts and Wide Hips, Sandalwood Death, Forty-one Guns, Life and Death Are Wearing Me Out, and Frog, and more than 100 short and medium-length novels, including Transparent Carrot, White Dog Swing, Comrades Reunion, and Master Is Getting More and More Humorous. He has written many plays and essays. His works have been translated into more than 40 languages, including English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Spanish, Russian, Korean, Dutch, Swedish, Norwegian, Polish, Arabic, and Vietnamese.