Read 500 words for the lamp in the attic _ read 500 words.

Last summer vacation, my mother bought me a set of books by Sheldon Silverstein, including Shooting the Lion, The Lost Corner, The End of the Sidewalk, A Fall, The Tree of Love and Lights in the Attic. I can never get enough of these books. Among them, my favorite book is Light in the Attic! It is said that the book "Light in the Attic" won eight annual book awards in the United States. It is also the longest record of The New York Times in the past 50 years; This series of books sold more than 65.438+0.8 billion copies, which were translated into 33 languages and became popular all over the world. As Amazon UK commented on it, "This is a great book, which opens the door to a magical world that has never been imagined by everyone".

In this book, Grandpa Schell vividly captures the essential characteristics of things with a few strokes and slightly exaggerated expressions, and presents us with a classic with nursery rhymes that complement each other. Every work in it is impressive. Some people can't help laughing, some are thought-provoking, and some make you think that Grandpa Schell is a big boy and speaks our deepest thoughts and dreams. ...

Have you ever seen a swing without nails, boards and ropes? In Grandpa Schell's pen, you can do it: "Let your beard grow to 100 inch long and wrap it around the branches of walnuts (see if the branches are strong enough). Now lift yourself from the ground and swing again when spring comes." Look at the people in the cartoon next to me. I couldn't help laughing. I secretly worry about him in the cartoon, but I have to admire Grandpa Schell's brain.

Have you ever been afraid? What should we do in the face of what we are afraid of? In Grandpa Schell's book, "That brown Barnabas never swims, never takes a boat, never takes a bath, let alone a ditch, for fear of drowning. He sits at home all day with the door locked and the window nailed. He trembled with fear for fear of being washed away by the flood. His tears flowed into the whole house, and finally he was drowned. " Grandpa Schell told us with his unique humor, wit and exaggeration that it is useless to escape from what we are afraid of. In order to overcome it, we must face it bravely.

Students, are you moved by my introduction? Then open this book quickly. I'm sure you will be as attracted to it as I am.