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After reading the brilliant thousand-sun 500 words.

After reading a famous book, everyone must have a lot of feelings about life or things. Why not write a review? In order to make you feel no headache after writing, here are 500 words I collected for you, hoping to help you.

I feel 500 words after reading Brilliant Thousand Yang, 1. My heart is full of faint sadness.

I know this is the influence after watching "Brilliant Thousand Yang".

I haven't been so eager to read for a long time. I saw a simple book review and introduction in the bookstore, so I bought two books by Khalid Husseini, The Kite Runner and Brilliant Thousand Sunnies. I really want to know about the daily life of ordinary people in Afghanistan or Iraq, especially women, those poor women.

I took a bath early last night and sat in bed watching. I only read two chapters. When I first read two pages, I was deeply concerned about the fate of that little girl named Mariam. Seeing her innocence, simplicity and extreme happiness when she was with her father when she was a child, when I imagined the fairy tale scene, my heart ached for her possible tragic fate in the future.

Sure enough, her beautiful soap bubble burst, and her most admired father was a coward and a hypocrite. In her father's mind, she is not a baby, but a heavy burden. She bravely searched for her father alone, which led to her mother's suicide, and her mother regarded her as the only pillar; Her short life in her father's house was soon betrothed by his father and his wives to a man in his forties; When the wives began to persuade her to agree to this marriage, she still held out a glimmer of hope that her great father would come forward to protect her from this marriage, but the father sitting next to her said nothing but painful silence. Even in the end, in the face of her tearful daughter's prayer, he only said, "Don't push me, dear Mariam." The tall Mount Tai collapsed and the beautiful soap bubbles were completely shattered.

I can't bear to look down, just like having a precious treasure and wanting to appreciate it slowly; I can't wait to know the result, so I can't help but turn over two pages and come back quickly, for fear that knowing the result will affect my reading mood.

After 500 words, I still choose Salvation. I really don't lose The Kite Runner.

The first level of redemption: kill Rasheed. This is Mary Yam who saved Lila with the hope of life and saved herself with the fearlessness of death. She let Lila escape and took all the consequences herself. Get rid of the tyrant's husband Rashid, Mariam believes that Lila will live better in the future; She also thanked Laila and her two children for giving her happiness and warmth, and felt that her existence was meaningful to others.

The second level of redemption: Zalal's legacy. This is his father Zalal's repentance and redemption for his illegitimate daughter Mary Yam's childhood. He once abandoned her, which is why he begged her for forgiveness and redemption. In the war, he lost his wife and children, his wealth was plundered, his body was tortured by illness, and he finally repented. With his last meager strength, he left his daughter letters, money and videos to pray for atonement. Unfortunately, I didn't wait for Mariam in the end. It is a little comforting that Mariam later understood my father's visit from 65438 to 0987.

The third level of redemption: return to Afghanistan. This is Lila's abandonment and redemption of the country by giving up her beautiful life in Pakistan and returning to Afghanistan with her family.

1) She returned to Mariam's hometown and got Mariam's father's relics through Hamsa, which brought Mariam's story to a successful conclusion.

2) She rebuilt the orphanage, became a teacher, witnessed the recovery of the city, and became what her father said that "Afghanistan will need you after this war".

3) She is pregnant again and looking forward to a new life. This is the rebirth of Mariam, the sustenance of the deceased and the endless hope of this country.

Finally, eldest brother Zhang Xinyu said:

We don't live in a peaceful era, but we are lucky to live in a peaceful country.

I dare not write any comments easily after reading Brilliant Thousand Yang, for fear that my words are too shallow, and war is the root of evil. Thank the motherland for its peace and stability. When I saw the time in the book was 1987, I was just born at that time, and my birth did not bring happiness to my family. After all, it was a time when family planning preferred boys to girls. The whole primary school period in my memory was beautiful, remember?

In 20xx, I went to junior high school, and SARS appeared in 20xx. I thought of my classmates and teachers at that time. Although there may be no connection, what comes to mind is that when I am on duty in the morning, I will have classes in the classroom, play hopscotch with my classmates and tidy my bike in the school square. Until now, I occasionally dream that I missed the last bus when I was in high school at night. In my dream, I was anxiously looking for my bike in the school parking lot. Now my impression is completely blurred. I don't remember whether I really missed the last bus or couldn't find my bike in the dark. In 20xx, I was in college. Every day at that time was simple and beautiful. I can read my favorite novels at will. No matter day or night, no matter how long the TV series is, I have enough time to catch up and do several jobs part-time. Walking around the playground with roommates and having a free and easy heart-to-heart conversation should be the normal life track of many post-80 s people. At the same time, the life experience of the Afghan people is unimaginable, so I often think that I should be grateful for my present life.

Even if you encounter many hardships and twists and turns in your life, life is not so oppressive that you can't breathe, and your hands and brain are not bound. As long as you are willing to work hard, life will double your reward.

There is a feeling of 500 words when reading "Brilliant Thousand Yang". 4 "Brilliant Thousand Yang" makes people feel that they can't finish reading it. This story happened not long ago. Laila was born in the late 1970s, and the story has been going on until 20xx, but there is always a sense of distance between people, living in the same world, as if half is the sea and half is the flame. War, explosion, attack and conflict, regime change, refugee camps, oppression of women, hunger, displacement. How can these words, full of historical sadness during the Anti-Japanese War, appear frequently somewhere in our present era? Why are so many people threatened by destruction all the time and so many women trapped in the ancient and backward system in this booming era of competing development in various countries? This made me dumbfounded, and I felt the truth and cruelty that I couldn't understand from TV news.

When we talk about Afghanistan, what do we usually talk about … the change of regime just makes the tragedy endless. Violence is like a bottomless pit. It's hard to imagine what families, children and women are going through there. Ancient Afghanistan has long been transformed into a symbol of terrorism and war in countless news. You can't imagine that someone really has hearts, thoughts and feelings! The novel lets you see these people, the pain and suffering are endless, the blood and tears are mottled, and they can't swallow, like a sore throat. But the truth they yearn for is as real as the freedom they pursue, and the last light of their generation is as bright as a thousand sunshine, which makes people unable to look straight.

I accidentally watched the news today, and it was another scene of terrorist attacks in Afghanistan. The wounded are dying in the hospital bed. They look sad. When will the glory of a thousand suns fall on this troubled country?

After reading the book "Brilliant Thousand Yang", I feel that I have finished reading 500 words and 5 volumes. The plot is interlocking and fascinating. Sometimes I sigh for those two women, and sometimes I am disappointed by their stupid and ignorant quarrel. The plot is ups and downs, and the picture is full of sense, as if watching a movie. Fortunately, I finally have a happy ending. The characters in the book are lifelike. Sometimes I like the shoemaker and see that the shoemaker loves his little son so much. Not only to maintain the livelihood of five people, but also to be a good father. Aside from his domestic violence against two women, it is really not easy to be the only exporter of labor services in the era of war. The old shoemaker protected the safety of the two hostesses to a great extent.

For Maria, she is also the best destination. As for her father, adult repentance is insignificant to innocent children, and those past injuries are irreparable. Fortunately, Maria found hope in Lila. In Lila, Maria inherited her mother's selfless dedication and sublimated her mother Nana's narrow and resentful love until she passed Lila's love to the orphanage. Let more children be cared for, and the baton will be passed on. Love makes them grow, make them look brand-new and enrich their lives. As a mother, I was deeply shocked. These two women have been through so many hardships that they never lose confidence in life. They came step by step to help each other, especially in the war without any better medical conditions. I'm really sweating. Just be a mother, and good Lila. Perhaps we live in peacetime, never had such a painful family separation, such a bizarre life experience, and there is no domestic violence victim who is not sad. We also have all kinds of difficulties and confusions, which are nothing compared with them. In any case, we will strengthen our faith and bring light and hope to more people in order to love our people and children!

And The Kite Runner are different reading experiences. I wish the Afghan people health and safety, stay away from the war, and pray for those friends who have lost their families! Bless world peace and happiness.

20xx.6.25

After reading 500 words, I feel brilliant and sunny. This is a book that deeply touched me again after The Kite Runner. Thank the author for bringing me a completely different feeling, letting me know about Afghanistan and the suffering of the Afghan people, although this suffering may be only part of it.

What the author showed me was the brilliance of human nature and the seeds of hope buried in people's hearts. No matter how difficult the situation is, this seed will never die. One day, hope will sprout green shoots and save every pious person.

Two women from Afghanistan, completely different from each other but ordinary, have tragic memories of not belonging to their contemporaries. * * * have been devastated by war, poverty and domestic violence. The bitterness and patience hidden in their hearts are intertwined, which makes them once incompatible and makes them form a friendship, just like mother and daughter. In unforgivable times, there are indelible memories. Finally, freedom and happiness brought Mariam's life to Laila, which crossed the war. This is Afghanistan from the 1970s to the early 20th century, which shocked me. I am surprised that such a life has appeared in such a recent era. This is not the past, or an unhealed scar.

I can't deeply understand the tragic life of Afghan women, and I can't understand the profound disasters in their lives. However, thanks to them, I appreciate and cherish my present life. I am free and have my own rights. I was born and lived in a peaceful era, a peaceful country.

I like the perseverance of self-salvation conveyed between the lines when reading. They have their own beliefs. Maybe I can't fully understand how important this belief is to them, but I can vaguely understand that faith is something they can't lack in their bodies, just like their brains and blood. But what makes me sad is that religion is often used by some people as a cover, for cruelty and for personal gain, but faith itself is a wonderful thing.

This is the first time I have read this book. I believe it can bring me more than that.

Read 500 words of Brilliant Thousand Yang. I remember clearly that this book was recommended by Brother Ren, and it took me almost two weeks to finish it. A lot of feelings ...

First of all, Mary Yam, a native of Harami, went from her happy and simple life with Nana and her expectation for Zhalile to her despair and sadness, and then she was beaten and endured after marrying Rashid, and finally killed her husband for Laila's new life.

As for Laila, the author described a wonderful childhood, especially when she had an enlightened father and her playmate Tariq. Then the war broke out and her parents were killed. Rashid asked someone to lie to her that Tariq was dead. When she learned that she was pregnant with Tariq's child, she had no choice but to marry Rashid, and went through a lot of cruelty and hardships. Fortunately, Lila finally got happiness, and she and Tariq and the children finally lived a happy life together. I have to say that this happiness is brought by Mariam. In the last few years of her life, Mariam got some warmth and love from Lila and the children. Finally, she helped them, which she thought was worth it.

What I hate most about this book is Zale's letter to Mariam, which expresses his guilt and self-blame for many years. I don't think Mariam would have suffered so much if he hadn't hindered his face and reputation.

This book is a compliment to Afghan women, praising their yearning and pursuit for a better life. Although Mariam finally died, she protected Laila and her daughter. In the face of Rashid's death, she was indifferent. For the first time, she defended her rights and resisted male chauvinism, so she was also great. And Lila, who was educated by her father from an early age, knew how to defend her rights from an early age. Even in the face of Rashid's beating, she never flinched and insisted on safeguarding rights.

After reading 500 words, Brilliant Thousand Yang recently read a good book called Brilliant Thousand Yang. Brilliant Thousand Yang was written by Khalid, an American Afghan. Husseini wrote after his first novel The Kite Runner.

Brilliant Thousand Yang mainly tells the story of the illegitimate daughter Mariam's childhood, which will never return on her15th birthday. On her birthday, because her father, who visited regularly, didn't pick her up, she took a taxi to her father's house, but he didn't open the door for her. In desperation, Mariam had to go home by car again. Unexpectedly, mother Nana hanged herself by the big tree in front of her house-a shabby little mud house, and her soul died.

After burying her mother, she was taken to his mansion by her father. Within a few days, she was forced to marry Rashid, a middle-aged shoemaker in Kabul. In the next few years, Mariam was pregnant with six or seven children, but each time she ended in abortion. At the same time, Mariam became worse and worse, and more and more domestic violence appeared in her life.

18 years later, Laila, a girl who lived in turbulent times, lost her parents and lover, and she was forced to marry Rashid.

Two Afghan women, with tragic memories of different times, suffered from war, poverty and serious domestic violence. The interweaving of grief and patience in their hearts once made them get along day and night. Later, because of several things, they were moved by each other and reunited, which made them form a friendship such as mother and daughter crying. The scam that had been hidden for many years was finally exposed. What choices will they make? Where will their fate go? Where will they go back?

Brilliant Thousand Yang is about unforgivable times, impossible friendship and indestructible love. It moved me.

Reading "Brilliant Thousand Yang" means reading 500 words. Laila, who read this book, was influenced by her father's idea that women should be equal. At that time, it was considered an avant-garde idea. For Tariq's children, she is willing to marry the tyrannical uncle Rashid. Although she failed in her first escape. After giving birth to the second child, I feel that I have given up slowly. After all, in that environment. I met Tariq and realized that everything was a scam. Under Mariam's self-resistance and sacrifice, Laila and Tariq went to a carefree place. When the country had a glimmer of hope for revival, it rekindled the idea of returning home and seeking roots. This is a woman with a flame of thought in her heart, and the ending is quite gratifying.

Mariam's miserable life experience led her to endure in Rashid's house for decades and became a traditional Afghan woman with inferiority complex and cowardice and despair for her father. She can only rely on Rasheed and endure all kinds of torture. Because of that child, I knew Lila so well that I later died for Lila. At first, she was weak and selfish. She should have breathed a sigh of relief when she hammered Rashid to death. After decades of oppression and humiliation, she chose to bear it for her children not to hate her, and to give Laila and her mother a carefree future. Heartache and admire this role!

Zariel, too timid to take responsibility, gave up his daughter Mariam for fear of affecting his reputation. Although I finally mentioned that he had been repenting, I knew from the beginning that he actually loved Mary, but his cowardice led to many things that he didn't really think about. Such a person has been living under his own moral judgment and looking for his daughter in the middle, as if because his wives are dead and no one is putting pressure on him. I hope we don't run away from reality, just face it and come from the heart.

Rashid, don't judge. It's disgusting to fabricate Tariq's death and trick Lila into giving birth to his child. Typical male chauvinism, the product of society at that time. Sadism.

The war in Afghanistan always appears on TV news. After reading this book, I am glad that I am in a peaceful social environment, although there are some deficiencies in the system and environment, which require our slow efforts.

I feel 500 words after reading "Brilliant Thousand Yang". 10 "Harami" status made her live an isolated and innocent life in a mud house since childhood, full of doubts about her mother Nana's accusations and complaints, and extremely looking forward to her weekly fatherly love …

I left home to find my father's real home, and felt the hypocrisy and rejection of my extended family. When I returned to the mud house, my mother hanged herself …

Back to that big hypocritical family ... The regret of my mother's death has not subsided ... An absurd marriage came to my door, forcing her to accept rather than take. The most important thing is that my father didn't consider her feelings and future at that time …

The stranger in her new home and her husband were polite to her mask at first, because she was still useful … after many miscarriages (7 times? ) There is no doubt about the true face of his hatred and domestic violence against her! Everything she does is a punching bag, whether she does it right or not, including Lila's initial mistakes ... everything is silently endured or not. At first, she didn't mean to resist ... until Laila's daughter made her feel deep love, and she had something to protect in her heart and made up with Laila. ...

Later, Rasheed was so violent that she wanted to strangle Laila. After decades of disobedience, she killed Rasheed ... and took the initiative to take responsibility and let Laila fly away with her two children and Tariq. ...

Mariam and Lila are bound by the customs and etiquette of the old times and subjected to Rasheed's cruel domestic violence! The mutual trust and friendship between women during the war in Afghanistan and women in the later period is admirable. Every time I look at a plot, many pictures come to my mind … I really feel the suffering of the people in the war …

After reading 500 words of Brilliant Thousand Sunrays 1 1 I first came into contact with Khaled Husseini's The Kite Runner, and I enjoyed it very much. Now every time I do something, I ask myself a question,' Will I regret doing it?' Of course, I will go deep into my heart to find the answer before making a decision.

The story of Mary Yam and Lila throws a series of questions in my mind from time to time, such as how to define women in our society and how to define women's rights as equality.

Mariam was violently abused by her family and deprived of her basic personal freedom and right to education. Her husband's male chauvinism, son preference and conservative thinking made me think deeply, let me pay attention to the surrounding environment, observe the lives of relatives and friends, and see the essence of their lives through the brilliance I saw in their lives.

National peace is very important to a person's life, a family and the social environment of a city. As a woman, I am glad that I can live in such a peaceful country, born in a peaceful era, and live in a family with equality between men and women, democratic management, advanced thinking and foresight. I don't know if this is the blessing of my predecessors, but I am very grateful.

The unfortunate fate of these two women has a great influence on me. I observed the family around me and found many details that I hadn't thought of before and didn't notice. In our environment, there are not a few families with violent families, husbands with wives and children who are still having an affair outside, families that do not give women the corresponding status in the family, male chauvinistic families, and many families that educate their children to be conservative. This book.

Of course, just like the title of this book, as long as there are countless bright sunshine, our society will certainly become better.

? People can't count how many bright moons are on her roof.

I can't count thousands of bright suns behind her wall.

After reading 500 words, the number of people can't tell how many bright moons there are on her roof.

I can't count thousands of bright suns behind her wall.

This is another book that deeply touched me after Ordinary World. I am grateful to the author for bringing me a completely different feeling, letting me know about Afghanistan and the suffering experienced by the Afghan people, although this suffering may be only part of it.

What the author showed me was the brilliance of human nature and the seeds of hope buried in people's hearts. No matter how difficult the situation is, this seed will never die. One day, hope will sprout green shoots and save every pious person. Two women from Afghanistan, completely different from each other but ordinary, have tragic memories of not belonging to their contemporaries. * * * have been devastated by war, poverty and domestic violence. The bitterness and patience hidden in their hearts are intertwined, which makes them once incompatible and makes them form a friendship, just like mother and daughter. In unforgivable times, there are indelible memories. Finally, freedom and happiness brought Mariam's life to Laila, which crossed the war. This is Afghanistan from the 1970s to the early 20th century, which shocked me. I am surprised that this kind of life happened in such a recent era. This is not the past, or an unhealed scar.

I can't deeply understand the tragic life of Afghan women, and I can't understand the profound disasters in their lives. However, thanks to them, I am more grateful and cherish my present life. I am free and have my own rights. I was born and lived in a peaceful era, a peaceful country.

I like the perseverance of self-salvation conveyed between the lines when reading. They have their own beliefs. Maybe I can't fully understand how important this belief is to them, but I can vaguely understand that faith is something they can't lack in their bodies, just like their brains and blood. But what makes me sad is that religion is often used by some people as a cover, for cruelty and for personal gain, but faith itself is a wonderful thing.

This is the first time I have read this book. I believe it can bring me more than that.

Read 500 words 13 of Brilliant Thousand Yang, the original work I read last year. After reading it, my mood is tense, like the afternoon before the summer rainstorm, which makes people uncomfortable and dull. I tried to open the window, but there was no wind. Now reread, in the process of rereading, this feeling remains the same.

I really admire the author's writing style, and the characters and scenery described can give people a strong sense of picture. The psychological activities described are nuanced, hitting people's hearts directly, producing * * * sounds at some points, and empathizing with them.

I can only sympathize with the fate of Mariam and Laila, and what makes me feel most sad is Nana. Her father's weakness and the destruction of the people she loves make her full of resentment and hostility to the world. She saw that the essence of men at that time was to push evil on women, and the ordinary compass always pointed south. Formed her own set of female survival philosophy at that time, which was two words, patience. But she has love, and this world is her only warm harbor. She was the only one, and she was afraid that she would leave, so she used a method that her daughter didn't quite understand, and wanted her daughter to live safely. She told her daughter the only way to survive and that she had summed up the truth of life from life. However, just like when she was a child, she had endless trust and love for her father, and so did her mariam. It was too late, and her only hope was shattered. Her philosophy of life was patience, and there was no way to keep her. She ended her life without love and hope, and her grief was greater than death. In such a place where you can't live, maybe dying early in an invisible place is another way to live.

Reading the whole book from the beginning is very heavy. I don't know why the world is so unfair to girls. This book tells the story of two Afghan women, each of whom has tragic memories of different times and is under the heavy pressure of war, poverty and domestic violence. The bitterness and patience hidden in their hearts are intertwined, which makes them once incompatible and makes them form a friendship, just like mother and daughter.

First of all, Mary Yam, an illegitimate daughter who has no father's love but longs for it, lives with her mother, but always gets unhappy words from her mother. She wants to study, but her mother maliciously said that the school wouldn't want her and asked her to learn to be patient. Everyone has a thirst for knowledge, but Mary Yam didn't make her wish come true. I think it's sad that her mother took it out on her daughter. But it was such a mother who committed suicide when Mariam 15 years old. This is undoubtedly cruel to Mariam. She has no fatherly love, and now she has no maternal love, which is her only support. Later, she became the wife of Rashid, a middle-aged shoemaker in Kabul, and lived in the shadow of domestic violence in turbulent times.

I have no objection to the great changes in Mary Yam's life in the book. It can be seen that under the backward secular shackles of Afghanistan, a man chose to abandon his inner feelings and follow the old system for his reputation and status. On the contrary, an ordinary woman showed her strength and greatness in suffering. Here, she satirizes the cruelty of traditional customs, explores human nature in the form of a morbid society, and praises the image of women's self-reliance and perseverance.

However, Mary Yam's endurance, strength and greatness also cost her too much. Besides being thought-provoking, this book is even more uncomfortable to me. This is my feeling after watching "Splendid Thousand Sunnies".

500 words after reading Brilliant Thousand Yang 15 Brilliant Thousand Yang is a book I read recently. Because the author of this book is an Afghan-American, he describes the story that happened in Afghanistan, with two women as the protagonists, and reveals the hardships of the Afghan people in the context of war and social contradictions. When most people in the world live in a stable and harmonious country, who will care about the Afghan people? As a patriotic writer, Husseini has aroused my deep thought in order to show the social outlook and national status quo of Afghanistan!

The two girls experienced the shadow of war in their childhood, so they didn't have a chance to go to school. Although they are very eager to acquire knowledge, it is too extravagant for them. /kloc-when she was 0/5 years old, her mother's suicide made it worse, forcing the girl Mariam to choose to marry for a living, while another Laila lost her family and lover because of the war and was forced to marry.

The two girls belong to different times, but they have both experienced the sufferings brought by the war. Their families face livelihood problems and are oppressed everywhere. Their tragic experiences have made readers all over the world feel the value of peace. The strength that keeps them alive is patience. Countries compromise and endure because of the armed forces of powerful countries, and people endure for survival.

Once the book was published, it was appreciated and loved by readers. It seems that it only describes the childhood memories of two young girls, but it is actually through them to recall the social features of Afghanistan in two eras, the trauma suffered by the country and people, and the suffering of ordinary people for their livelihood. These painful memories make us cherish peace, stand up for justice and become braver.

Brilliant Qianyang not only feels sympathy and pity for all the sufferings of the Afghan people, but also causes us to think about the word "cherish peace"!