African folktales, China folktales, Lena Fox's stories and the Arabian Nights.
1. African folktales:
"African Folk Tales" is a brand series of books of wooden wooden horse for readers, with corresponding audio books. It is a collection of stories edited by Miao Xinyu, translated by Yi Lexiang and published by Jiangsu Phoenix Literature and Art Publishing House. It tells a series of bizarre and incredible stories that happened among the people.
2. China folk stories:
China Folk Tales is a book published by Zhejiang Children's Publishing House in May 2009. The authors are Li Jianshu and Sun Kan. It tells the profound culture of China, including the classic folk stories of all ethnic groups. This is a complete collection of stories.
China's folk stories contain rich historical knowledge and deep national feelings. As an indispensable part of China culture, it has eternal artistic charm and rich imagination. China's folk stories contain lofty ideas and virtues such as heroism, optimism and humanitarianism, which give people knowledge, enlightenment, encouragement and hope.
For young readers, reading China folk stories plays a positive and beneficial role in inheriting national culture, enlightening wisdom and broadening cultural horizons.
3. Lena Fox's story:
The Story of Lena Fox is a fairy tale adapted by the Frenchman Jenny Leroy-Alai. This work tells the story of Lena Fox, a representative of the new citizen class, who is always alert when facing the power of the lion king, the bullying of the male wolf and the helplessness of the rooster. On the one hand, it oppresses ordinary people, on the other hand, it conspires with powerful giants and even defeats powerful opponents.
The work shows the intricate situation of the contradictions and struggles of various social forces in medieval France. His works have a great influence on later literature with excellent comic techniques and humorous civic literature style.
4. Arabian Nights:
Arabian nights, also known as Arabian nights.
This work tells the story of a king named Shanruyar in ancient Arabia. He was cruel and jealous by nature and killed the queen because of her bad behavior. After that, he married a girl every day and killed her the next morning as revenge. Scheherazade, the daughter of the court minister, volunteered to marry the king to save the innocent woman. Scheherazade attracted the king by telling stories. Every night, she talked about the best part. It was just dawn, so that the king couldn't bear to kill her because he loved to hear stories, and allowed her to continue the story the next night.
Her story has been told for 1001 nights, and the king was finally moved to grow old with her. Gorky praised it as "the most magnificent monument" in the history of world folk literature because of its rich content and large scale.