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England: Shakespeare, Dickens, Lawrence, Hardy, the Brontë sisters, Francis. Bacon, Maugham, Jane.
Austen, Byron, Keats, Yeats, Wordsworth, Shelley, Pope, Swift, Defoe, Fielding, Bunyan, Milton, Wilde, Conrad, British-New Zealand writer Mansfield, etc.
France: Diderot, Rousseau, Balzac, Maupassant, Zola, Jules. Verne, Sartre, Camus, Flaubert, Stendhal, George Sand, Hugo, Gao Xingjian, Dude, Mérimée, Alexandre Dumas, Dumas, Muse, Molière, Rabelais, Corneille, Racine, Boileau, Baudelaire, Verlaine, Proust, France.
France and England are the countries rich in great writers in Europe, Germany is the country rich in philosophers in Europe, Russia is the country rich in literary giants in the world, and Leo Tolsta and Dostoevsky represent the breadth and depth of world literature, and they are two insurmountable peaks, which must be read!
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Let's be specific about the one upstairs:
England: William Shakespeare, a famous dramatist of the Renaissance, whose masterpiece is "Hamlet".
Charles Dickens, a 20th-century realist writer, wrote his masterpiece The Red and the Black, which deeply criticized the reality that ordinary people at that time were always excluded from high society no matter how hard they tried.
Hardy: The countryside is beautiful and simple; The representative work "Tess of the D'Urbervilles".
Keats, Wordsworth, and Shelley, all known as the "poets of the lake", all have different levels of sadness in their works, reminiscing about the feudal and law-abiding society.
France: Balzac, The Human Comedy, a unique "character reproduction method", through the repetition of characters in different stories, forms the whole work into a whole, the work describes the impact of the rise of the bourgeoisie on aristocratic society, and he uses his pen to "sing an endless elegy for his beloved aristocracy".
Zola: In his masterpiece "Sprout", he writes about the resistance of the proletariat in a realistic way.
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Famous British Writer:
Middle Ages: Geoffrey Chaucer.
Renaissance: Thomas More, Marlowe, William Shakespeare, Spin Raids.
Neoclassicism: Dryden, Wycherly, Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Alexander Popew, Richardson, Smollet, Henry Fielding, Lauren Steyn, Oliver Goethesmith, Gray.
Romanticism: Robert Burns, William Black, William Wordsworth, Samuel Coleridge, Saussure, Byron, Shelley, Walter Scott, John Keats.
Victorian: Thackeray, Charlotte Brontë, Emily Brontë, Charles Dickens, Thomas Hardy, Walter Pate, George Bernard Shaw.
20th Century: John Osborne, David Philosopher, Herbert Lawrence, John Goldworthy, Joseph Conrad, Maugham, Graham Greene, Kingsley Amis, Evelyn Waugh, Golding, Alice Murdoch, Doris Lessing, Eliot, Fergie Hood, Nia Woolf.
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Tudor period:
William Shakespeare, Thales Antononix
Scott Walter, The Queen's Prison Break
Victorian Dynasty:
Charlotte Bront "Jane Eyre" (Emily Bront hates her very much) Emily Bront "Wuthering Heights" (Charlotte Bront hates her very much) Both of their books are the best, their sister Anne also published a book, but it is rubbish, their brother Poland Will is also a nominal poet, and other people's praise is more rubbish, such as Jane Austen's "Pride and Prejudice", Charlotte Bront hates her very much) Charles Dickens "Bleak Heights" and "Bleak Heights" make up for it. (Charlotte Bront hates him very much) Hardy's "Tess of the D'Urbervilles" It feels okay. (Natsuzen Charlot Bront hates him very much).
Maugham's The Veil, (whom all five writers despise because he is a poor imitator of Emily Bront).
Famous during the Second World War are:
T.S. Eliot, "The Waste Land."
William Golding, Lord of the Flies (which is good).
The following 3 are poets:
Byron's "Poems", Keats's "Poems".
The following 3 of Shelley's "Poems" are more alternative than Ye Duan to write professional detectives**.
Akasha Christi, Cliff Lodge
Baroness Ossiz (this person's work is rubbish).
Conan Doyle, "Sherlock Holmes" (Edgar Allan Poe's imitator).
The following two are sci-fi:
Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
Jonathan Swift, Gulliver's Travels
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Shakespeare repented and accompanied Ya.
William Shakespeare (23 April 1564 – 23 April 1616) was an English Renaissance playwright and poet.
He was born on 23 April 1564 in Stratford, Warwickshire, England. From 1571 to 1579 he studied at Stratford Grammar School. In 1587, he began his career as an actor and began to try his hand at writing scripts.
In 1591, the plays "Henry VI II" and "Henry VI II" were premiered. In 1592, the play "Richard III" was premiered. In 1595, the plays Romeo and Juliet and A Midsummer Night's Dream premiered.
In 1596, the play "The Merchant of Venice" was premiered. In 1601, the play "Hamlet" was premiered, which attracted the attention of the literary world. In 1603, the play Othello premiered.
In 1605, the play King Lear premiered. In 1606, the play "Macbeth" was premiered. In 1614, he left London and returned to his hometown.
On April 23, 1616, he died in his hometown.
1. "Lettuce Girl".
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Generally, there will be a summary later in the book.
Jin Yong, Lu Xun, Lao She, Lu Yao, Chen Zhongzhong, Zhang Hatshui, Linda, A Lai, Patrick Modiano, Orhan Pamuk, Márquez, Alexandre Dumas, Victor Hugo, Maugham, McEwan, Jane Morris, ......The above writers are particularly fond of them, except for Zhang Hatshui's works, which I bought about ten, and the others bought all the works they could buy. Of course, some writers also like it, but after buying one or two works, they can't be called particularly fond of it.
Categories: Social Livelihood >> Other Social Topics.
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