In order to entice Mr. M to accompany me to watch the attributive I gave is a film adapted from an autobiography written by a student of Tiger Mom, Chua Meier, Yale
The first time I knew this book was recommended by a leading beauty reporter in the International News Department 4 years ago by a former colleague of the newspaper. She said that it was considered a best-selling book that influenced the 2016 election. The blue-collar middle class grew up in a poor family. The father was missing. The mother was in a state of chaos and drug use. Fortunately, his tough grandmother fished him out of the quagmire. He joined the army and then went to State University and then to Yale Law School. With the encouragement of my teacher Chua Meier, I wrote my own story. Watching this adapted film during the 2020 general election has a wonderful occasion. Two stars are given to GG who plays the grandmother and AA who plays the mother. However, the filming of Long Howard is really unsound.
There is a section in the PS film that made me cry. Grandpa was sent back to the small town in the Appalachian mountains after his death. Pedestrians and vehicles stopped on the road to pay tribute to JD. Tradition I can’t help but think of the mountain town where I grew up. When people go out of the mountain (funeral), they will go around the town and then go up to the soil. It’s a similar scene. There is a conservative tradition. There is a tacit understanding of so-called globalization. There is a wedding in the town, even if the neighbor is an enemy, the neighbor should let out the hall to help set up the banquet and watch the movie. I immediately placed an order on Amazon and bought the English version of the book and the Chinese version on the domestic version of Kindle.
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