The difference between Letters from Fu Lei and Classic Chat is that Classic Chat is more applicable than Letters from Fu Lei.
A Letter from Fu Lei is a book published by Yilin Publishing House in 218. It was written by Fu Lei, Zhu Meifu and Fu Cong and edited by Fu Min. It was first published in 1981. This book is an exchange of letters between Fu Lei and his wife, Fu Cong and Mila, which reflects the father's painstaking care for his son, runs through Fu Cong's growing experience from studying abroad and playing well to getting married and having children, and also reflects Fu Lei's translation work and the ups and downs of Fu Lei's family's fate. The golden sentence in the book: "Be a man first, then an artist, then a musician, and finally a pianist".
Fu Cong's letter was lost in the Cultural Revolution, when all the Fu family property was copied, and Fu Cong's letter was not spared. One day more than ten years later, the Shanghai Conservatory of Music found some of Fu Lei's relics, including a workbook wrapped in black paper, entitled Excerpts from Conger's Letters. In 1986, after learning about this, Fu Cong resolutely refused to publish these letters, because he felt that his thoughts and words were too immature to be compared with his father when he was young.
Classic Talk:
Classic Talk (Another Kind: Appreciation of Elegance and Vulgarity) and that period: Mr. Zhu Ziqing introduced the classic works in China's cultural heritage in thirteen articles with simple and practical words. Written in 1942, This Classic Talk (Another Kind: Appreciation of Elegance and Vulgarity) has been widely circulated for more than 6 years and has become an enlightenment classic to popularize China's traditional culture.
The book is insightful, popular and fluent, and easy to understand. It is an introductory guide for ordinary readers to understand China's ancient cultural classics. On the Appreciation of Elegance and Vulgarity, another kind of Classic Talk (Another Kind: Appreciation of Elegance and Vulgarity), was first published by Shanghai Observatory in early May 1948 and was the last book of Mr. Zhu Ziqing before his death. The book contains "Fourteen Papers on Literature and Art", discusses the appreciation standards and differences of poetry works, and puts forward many incisive and thought-provoking views.