3 Cafe at the End of the World
Have you ever come across a book that you like very much? Like a book that you have to flip through every once in a while? Today, I would like to share four books that are worth reading and re-reading, and each of them is very precious.
Cafe at the End of the World
A must-read book when you are confused, you can read it in an hour with a thin book, but it can bring you unexpected gains. In addition to guiding you to think, it can also inject faith and courage into you, so that you can "dare" to do it.
I read it every time I couldn't find a goal, and there was one sentence that I really liked: do what you want to do, be who you want to be, and don't need the permission or consent of others.
"Emotional Self-Control"
Everyone has a time when they can't control their emotions, and every decision made at the emotional pole is regretted afterwards. It's not that things are so bad that they can't be managed, it's that we always speak impulsively and do things impulsively because of our emotions.
This book has alleviated my emotions to a great extent, using examples, analysis, and yin to analyze ten common and easy-to-lose emotions of girls, which can not only dredge the unhappiness in my heart, but also soothe the anxiety in my heart.
There is a saying I like very much: we should no longer live selflessly on the face, and let our hearts accumulate so many grievances, aggrieved people must learn to reconcile with themselves, tell each other if they can't swallow their grievances, refuse to do what they don't want to do, and adjust in time to dredge anxiety.
The Book of Answers to Life
This book by Mr. Zhou Guoping, which is a collection of questions and answers, consists of questions and answers. The book is divided into eight sections, including emotion, career, mentality, life, philosophy, education, growth, and reading. When you read it, your heart will calm down, and the process of reading is like a teacher who knows everything is solving your doubts in life.
There are many points that I particularly agree with, such as: through reading the scriptures, you have a considerable understanding and appreciation of the basic and eternal values that human beings pursue, and only under this premise can you make a correct judgment about the times and know what is good and what is bad.
The Maggie's Gift
This book is a collection of short stories by O. Henry, which contains thirty-five of his masterpieces, all of which are classics, each of which is very short, and the story of three or four pages can tell the wisdom of life.
The first story in the book is "The Gift of the Magi", two young couples trapped in life, who have no extra money to buy gifts for each other at Christmas, and the wife cries and sells her proud hair and buys a watch chain for her husband without telling his wife.
This story left a deep impression on me, if it wasn't for each other's deep love, how could the other party give up what they cherish most? It also made me confess what true love is, that is, when you love someone deeply, it is not enough to make any sacrifices.
The novels look very short, but each one is very stunning, and I think this is the meaning of the classics, and any time they are brought out, they can teach us a lesson. For example, this sentence: Of course, you can't offer a price to have 'Eternity' bandaged and delivered to your door, but I saw that when the old man walked through the gold mine, his ankles were full of scars.
There is also this saying: What kind of person we become is not determined by what path we choose, but by what our nature is.
"Reading is the axe that cuts into the frozen sea inside us"
There are many life truths in this book, the author Gustav met Kafka at the age of seventeen, and the two began a friendship between teachers and friends, and the book recounts the experiences and conversations between the two.
Even if you haven't read Kafka's book, there is no problem in reading this book, and after reading it, I like him even more, he has his own opinions on literature, art, reading, writing, freedom, life, loneliness, etc., and his views and liberation are still outdated, there are many golden sentences, and every sentence is worth pondering repeatedly.
One of the benefits of reading is that it fills in the paleness of one's life experience. The road that others have taken many years to complete, dozens of days, days or even hours, is like a movie lens replaying for you, those moods that could only be experienced after the vicissitudes of life, but now I am fortunate to have a glimpse of it before the years have passed.