Reading Changes Your Life - Watching the Movie "Jane Austen Book Club"

Colten 2022-01-28 08:23:36

Blues Shakespeare

in Japan working with her husband a few years and then go to Austria to open the restaurant after Di Qiu Hui Hu, often about people drinking coffee at Starbucks CITIC Pacific. After she and her husband sold the restaurant near Vienna, the two broke up amicably. After returning to Shanghai, she owned a certain number of shares and a house. She lived a leisurely life, but she was bored all day long when she was well-fed and well-dressed. Ye Qiu, a high school classmate, occasionally gets together, except to talk about food, clothing, income, and friends' mutual privacy, but he can't talk about anything.

Yesterday, I watched the American movie "The Jane Austen Book Club", which magnified the knot in my heart into a movie screen, and connected a series of typical stories.

On the road of life, everyone at different stages will always be confused to varying degrees in many aspects, such as work, career, family, love, and even how to play, play, and live. Of course, it is not terrible to be confused. The important thing is to quickly sort out your thoughts with a clear head, and then move on. However, at this time, the parties often lose their usual calmness, and at this time they need some good friends around.

The six-person "Jane Austen Book Club" was naturally established on the basis of common interests. Initiated by Bernadette, who is not young but still full of human charm, her kindness is warm, her wisdom makes people feel comforted by her, and the wounded heart is no longer afraid of the painful reality. She is realistic and unrestrained. She has been married six times. She is single in her 50s and is still full of hope for the future.

Jocelyn, the second book friend, has no lover and doesn't believe in love except for her pet dog, Pridey.

Sylvia, a book friend who grew up with Jocelyn, has been married for many years and has three children. One day, her husband told her that he was in love with someone else. Like some middle-aged men who are adventurous, her husband Daniel abandoned her and her children for a momentary passion to verify whether she still has gender charm at this stage. She was in so much pain.

Their daughter, Allegra, the fourth book friend, like many people in the rebellious stage, treats everything as if it is exciting enough.

The fifth book friend, Prudy, a French teacher at a high school, just got married. Her husband canceled a long-planned trip to Paris for work reasons, leaving her in a depressed state of suspicion that her husband was having an affair.

The sixth book friend is the only male Rigge. At the age of 30, he and Jocelyn met in the elevator of a hotel, had a good impression of her, and joined her in the book club.

They read "Emotion and Reason" in February, "Emma" in March, and "Pride and Prejudice" in June. The book fair is sometimes held on the book friend's small farm, sometimes in the comfort of a book friend's home, sometimes in the book friend's suburban village house, and sometimes at a Starbucks. Once, to pay homage to Austin's description of the sea scene, he went to the beach for a picnic.

By discussing Austen's work at the book meeting, they finally turned their slightly off-track life to the light of their reading. Finally, these six book friends. have found their own happiness. The promoter found a boyfriend who studied English literature, and the marriage was accomplished. Sylvia, whose marriage has turned red, her husband attended the book club halfway after his new love left for a new problem. After reading, he returned to his wife. Because the newlywed husband is not like Pruddy who used to hold her in the palm of his hand, he withdraws the chaotic heart of the handsome high school student outside to seduce her, and encourages her husband to read Austin, so the relationship is restored. Jocelyn falls in love with Rigg. After several in-depth discussions with the book club, the new human Allegra finally announced with a calm mind that she was gay.

A book club was formed because of mutual good, and reading changed life. The movie "Jane Austen Book Club" has put forward a kind of beautiful advice to people in real life. Life is long, who can not be confused? Come and read, reading will change your life.

Life without hobbies is certainly not interesting. Just to eat and clothe in this world is too baby condition. Let's read together, not necessarily Jane Austen, nor anyone in particular. As long as it is helpful to us, as long as it inspires our journey, as long as it can inspire and tap our potential thinking and ability, as long as we are in the book club, we can warm each other, remind each other, and remind each other. Share the resources that each draws wisdom crystals. In this way, moving forward in this way, the road ahead will definitely be easy to walk, and our respective paths will definitely be very happy and full of joy.

2008-1-2

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Extended Reading

The Jane Austen Book Club quotes

  • Sylvia Avila: Look, I adore Jocelyn, but . . . ah ha, if, "Loving is letting go," then whoever wants Jocelyn is going to have to pry her fingers loose, one by one.

  • Editor: Dear Ms. Corrine Mahern, we regret that we must decline to publish the three short stories you sent to us. 'Benny's Basketball' is strong narratively, but the depiction of your penis-waving retarded boy felt a little unkind. And isn't the title 'Separating Eggs For Flan' a bit obvious as a metaphor for your parents' divorce? Yet we confess that 'Skydiver' puzzled us most. Why would a beautiful, self-centered young lesbian jump out of a plane?