Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Tourist attractions - Dear Alice

Dear Alice

# Two Wan Li under the Sea # Partner * * * Reading Day 68

I read Dear Alice written by Cheng Wei tonight.

This book tells the story between Milan, a China girl who grew up in Germany, and Alice, a German grandmother. The development of letters is introduced in the book. For example, since the mid-17th century, a postal network has been established all over Europe. Writing letters has become a hobby of rich and time-consuming nobles. Letters came and went, and in the 18th century it contributed to the epistolary literature in European literature. A mother in Paris, because she missed her daughter who was married to Provence in the south of France, kept writing to her daughter to express her thoughts, so she became the most famous letter writer in the world.

? Alice left two small footprints under the windowsill, and the same footprints were left under the bedroom window in Milan. Who was here?

I'm a little surprised to read this. What kind of book is this? ? Because there was no preface and preface to this book, I turned to the end and didn't know until I finished reading the Preface to the Generation.

This is the sixth book in the series "Chatting with Alice on Weekends" by Cheng Wei (a famous writer living in Germany). I haven't read the first five books. It should record Alice and Milan chatting in a secret garden, and introduce her how to treat people gracefully and calmly, such as how to say hello, how to wrap gifts, how to knock on the door, and how to address the elderly ... This book is a story about Alice's communication with young readers, which can also be said to be customized for hundreds of classes and thousands of people.

There is a sentence in the book that aroused my feeling: Have you received such a letter recently? A long, handwritten, stamped letter? How long has it been? You got it when you were still at school, right? It should have been 18 years ago, really! When was the last letter I wrote? December 16, 213! Now, this letter is back in my hands! Haha, not bad!

? Reading record day 299

September 1, 217