Have you ever heard of the book Lost Horizon ? It seems to have been written by an Englishman.

Updated on society 2024-06-14
8 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    The plane crashed, and in order to survive, he found the paradise "Shangri-La"."When I went back, I couldn't find it.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Honestly, when that living Buddha came to me, I would think that if it were me, I might really stay in that place. I think a lot of the words in it make sense, happiness touches happiness is really fleeting, people often get old in an instant, maybe you are happy and happy at this moment to live a carefree life, you will feel that you want to stay in that environment for a hundred years or even longer will feel incredible like Malinson, but when you experience hardships and pain and can't extricate yourself, such a calm and soft world full of knowledge and art will become a kind of yearning for liberation. But in reality the world overthrew itself.

    If there is no ** mine, how can it guarantee the basic needs of the people who survive there. This is the problem of modern people, while filling their stomachs and feeding their ideals, they say that they do not forget their original intentions, but in the end we all deviate from that track.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    This book made me think, what exactly is Shangri-La, a paradise, what is Shangri-La that makes people dream, is it that it gives us peace of mind or the abundance of life? I think it should be spiritual wealth, but if it is spiritual wealth, why do you have to find peace in that place that disappears into the horizon? So, I think the arrangement for the protagonist at the end of this book is to tell us that Shangri-La is in your own spirit, even if you are in the middle of the city.

    Just like that Luo Zhen, Shangri-La in the snow-capped mountains is fragile, and the tranquility obtained by Shangri-La is far less strong than the Shangri-La found in the downtown area. That's how I understand it.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    I thought it was about Shangri-La in Yunnan, so I picked it up with great interest, but after reading it, I found that it was not like this, and I was gradually disappointed. However, I really like the descriptions of all kinds of blues, iron blue, porcelain blue, etc., and I think the words are used very well. Then there is the golden mean, which I think seems a bit far-fetched, the story is quite simple, and it doesn't give me a very amazing feeling, that is, I can't smack my lips after closing the book, forgive me for being a foodie.

    Also, the people of Shangri-La seem to be forcing others to accept their way of life, their ideas, and forcing outsiders to stay, although this world is beautiful, it gives you a sense of oppression, which reminds me of 1984, which may not be accurate enough to understand, but it is really too oppressive to read, and I don't like their deliberate pursuit of the golden mean.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    He is a wanderer between two worlds and is destined to wander forever. This sentence is the core of my understanding of the book. Couldn't it be understood at first why Conway chose to leave the Blue Moon Valley in order to fulfill Rowling and Malinson?

    Or has he seen through the impermanence of the world, and the dream is too illusory after all? Shangri-La is a peach blossom source supported by a large treasury, and in the real world, dreams are often not eaten, and it takes a lot of compromises to survive in a vulgar social environment, how can it only be happy and comfortable. Here envy the people who can take their dreams as their career and live a chic and chic life, although it is inevitable that there will be red tape, but the main body of life no longer needs too much struggle.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    It should be the ideal and the reality. If Conway is the protagonist, Shangri-La is a paradise completely created for him, and the state of life there is completely suitable for a "moderately lazy" person like him. I think the most important passage in the book, and one that puzzled me, was the turning point when Conway decided to walk out of Shangri-La with Malinson.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    In fact, Shangri-La is everyone's dream paradise. Malinson is special, he is a realist, it can also be said that he is still young, he hopes that there are many possibilities in life, and he is not willing to satisfy only one feeling and give up other more possibilities, or he has not yet determined his own life pursuit, if there is Shangri-La will definitely satisfy him.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    This is a rare and good book. I may be saying nonsense, but I want to say it anyway. This book can only be understood but not spoken, and it is inferior to say it. I can only realize it myself, the feeling that touches my heart.

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