-
**Name: Minecraft My Dream.
Genre: Sci-fi.
**Status: Ended.
Word count: 154,120 words.
Introduction: The book tells the story of the book after it was published in Europe and the United States, which caused great repercussions. As interviewed by journalist Rick.
Buche is a professional writer in the NBA, and the angle from which he asks Yao Ming is the humanistic perspective of Westerners, and there is no ideological constraint of reporters and writers in Guopeiyuan, so the book gives full attention to Yao Ming's growth environment, basketball career, the shortcomings of Chinese sports, and Yao Ming's own love experience. <
-
The main content of Yao Ming's "My World, My Dream":
In the book, Yao Ming tells the story of his upbringing in China and his first season in the NBA in the first person, interspersed with comments from Yao's teammates and coaches on the Rockets, but most of the content comes from Yao's own voice. The book also discloses Yao Ming's various efforts and even struggles to play in the NBA, as well as his feelings about playing against "Big Shark" O'Neal in the NBA.
Yao Ming was born in 1980 in Xuhui District, Shanghai, and his ancestral home is Zhenze, Wujiang. Chinese basketball player.
In April 1998, he was selected for the national team coached by Wang Fei and began his basketball career. In 2002, he was drafted by the NBA's Houston Rockets as the top pick. He was named to the NBA West All-Star team for six consecutive seasons from 2003 to 2008.
In 2009, Yao Ming acquired the Shanghai men's basketball team and became the owner of the Shanghai Big Sharks Basketball Club. On July 20, 2011, Yao Ming officially announced his retirement. In 2013, Yao Ming was elected as a member of the 12th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference.
In June 2014, he participated in Hunan Satellite TV's "Where Are You Going, Dad" as a guest guest.
On February 10, 2015, he officially became one of the image ambassadors of Beijing's bid to host the Winter Olympics.
-
Introduction: The Chinese version of Yao Ming's autobiography, which sold well in the United States and swept Europe with a sky-high manuscript fee of 1.5 million US dollars, finally fell to the Beijing Book Center of Changjiang Literature and Art Publishing House. The English version of Yao Ming's autobiography is titled Yao:
The Life of Two Worlds", which caused great repercussions after its publication in Europe and the United States. Because the interview reporter Rick Buzi Yuche is a professional writer in the NBA, and the angle from which he asks Yao Ming is the humanistic perspective of Westerners, there is no ideological constraint of domestic reporters and writers, so the book gives full attention to Yao Ming's growth environment, basketball career, the shortcomings of Chinese sports, and Yao Ming's own love experience.
For example, Yao Ming's first visit to the United States was full of hunger; For example, the bureaucracy of the Chinese Basketball Association's negotiations with the NBA; For example, the proportion of income sharing between Shanghai Shark Club and Yao Ming; For example, those who try to use Yao Ming to achieve their personal goals, but when they fail, they will destroy it; For example, Yao Ming enumerated the shortcomings of China's sports system, raids, and especially basketball. Wait a minute. Most importantly, the book is interspersed with reviews and comments from NBA lawyers, agents, Rockets managers, directors of the Chinese Basketball Association, coaches, parents and friends from the rest of the country.
These dense details and multiple angles form a solid, thick and undulating symphony of Yao Ming's autobiography.
The biggest buying point for domestic readers is that Yao Ming has added two chapters specifically for the Chinese edition: Yao Ming at the Athens Olympics and his care for the Special Olympics. Therefore, the title of the Chinese version of the book was changed to "My World My Dream".
-
In the book, Yao Ming will talk about his upbringing in China and his first season in the NBA in the first person, interspersed with comments from Yao's teammates and coaches on the Rockets, but most of the internal appearance comes from Yao's own voice. The book also reveals Yao Ming's efforts and even struggles to play in the NBA, as well as his touching thoughts about playing against "Big Shark" O'Neal in the NBA.
-
Genre: Sci-fi.
**Status: Ended.
Word count: 154,120 words.
Introduction: It tells that after the book was published in Europe and the United States, it caused great repercussions. As interviewed by journalist Rick.
Butche is a professional writer in the NBA, and the angle from which he asks Yao Ming is the humanistic perspective of Westerners, and there is no ideological shackles of domestic journalists and writers, so the book fully dismantles Yao Ming's growth environment, basketball career, the shortcomings of Chinese sports, Ze Yuyu and Yao Ming's own love experience.
As follows:
1. Remember: don't drink more than six points of drunkenness, don't eat more than seven points of fullness when eating, and don't love someone more than eight points. >>>More
Is this a children's book? I don't know if this will work for you. >>>More
Who is it that keeps us well fed? Who gave us a happy home? It's our motherland! >>>More
I really enjoyed the article "Father".
This article describes a rustic father. But despite his rusticism, his children love him very much. >>>More
Do a good job of these four points, so that you can feel the full score after reading.