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Notes on Selected Short Stories by Mark Twain
We always say that "history is always strikingly similar". After reading this book, it is even more true.

When I watched "Million Pounds", I remembered the movie "The Richest Man in Tomatoes". It's all a bizarre story about diaosi suddenly getting a lot of money.

When watching The Legend of Venus on Mount Capitoli, I remembered that after the broadcast of Nirvana in Fire, two scenic spots thousands of miles apart were arguing that the site of Langya Pavilion was in their own territory.

Looking at the documentary events of bulk beef contracts, I remembered Taking in the name of people as an Example.

Reading The Story of a Good Boy and The Story of a Bad Boy reminds me of Camel Xiangzi and Duke of Lushan.

Karaoui, the famous jumping frog in Las County, and my recent resignation. . . . .

Narrative techniques include sequence and flashback, but without exception, the beginning of all novels is extremely suspenseful, which can arouse readers' curiosity and make people want to stop. The endings of novels are wonderful, unexpected and reasonable.

Reading novels is no longer a pure pastime. I don't know when I began to pay attention to the things behind the novel, the ideas conveyed by the novel, the background of the novel and the writing techniques of the novel. Maybe I am getting old.

Reading Selected Short Stories of Mark Twain is becoming more and more intense, and the things described in these novels will continue to happen in the future.