WWII

Uriel 2022-04-21 09:03:38

I feel deeply that my cultural level is limited, and I know nothing about European history. I am determined to make up for historical knowledge, but I feel ashamed. I could have learned a lot when I was studying, but I was lazy. So I went online to Baidu and read a lot of books about World War II. In fact, I can learn a lot from the bullet screen, such as how the British built home prevention and control holes, such as children who were sent to the countryside for refuge during the London explosion, such as the Great Depression, Roosevelt's New Deal, etc. Wait, I'm very moved when I see the back, the kind that makes people want to cry.

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Extended Reading
  • Myrl 2022-03-17 09:01:10

    It's like turning over an old villain book from beginning to end. The ending is a bit tragic, but it may be that everyone inevitably leaves after witnessing a period of history, which is both embarrassing and helpless. Such an accent, such a British grandmother, such a style of painting, such a pear tree, and the Easter egg at the end, this film decided not to delete it.

  • Madisen 2022-03-16 09:01:09

    How ordinary is this story? How lucky are two people who have escaped countless possible tragedies in their lives

Ethel & Ernest quotes

  • Ethel Briggs: I could have married a deep-sea diver.

    Ernest Briggs: Well, why didn't ya?

    Ethel Briggs: Because I didn't love him.

  • [first lines]

    Raymond Briggs: [voice over] There was nothing extraordinary about my Mum and Dad, nothing dramatic, no divorce or anything, but they were my parents and I wanted to remember them by doing a picture book. It's a bit odd really, having a book about my parents up there in the best seller list among all the football heroes and cookbooks. They'd be proud of that, I suppose, or rather probably embarrassed too. I'd imagine they'd say, "It wasn't like that," or, "How can you talk about that?" Well, I have, and this is their story.