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Illustration about plants under the night sky-How to draw a handwritten newspaper about plants

Fly to deep space, Mars and the moon, and explore your own inner universe

On July 4, astronauts on the Chinese Space Station conducted their first extravehicular activity, a spacewalk of about 7 hours; On July 11, Virgin Galactic’s Unity spacecraft completed a suborbital test flight with crew members including founder Richard Branson; on the same day, the Zhurong Mars rover traveled more than 100 kilometers on the surface of Mars. 400 meters; on July 20, Blue Origin’s New Shepard spacecraft also sent Amazon founder Bezos into space

These “from the future” technologies have all happened in the near future and have been completed The distant, ancient dream of mankind. For ordinary people, we can also find our own universe at this point in time. Therefore, we set the theme of the July book list as:

Discussing

The universe and the inner world

Of course, among them are films like "Wild Future" and "Qi Ma". There are science fiction literature such as "Blue" and popular science books such as "Earth 2.0" and "The Ultimate Stargazing Guide", while books such as "Rewalking", "The Age of No Privacy" and "The Fire Within" place more emphasis on the history, present and inner nature. think. In addition, this issue's book list also specially recommends Yang Liwei's "old book" "Nine Levels of Heaven and Earth".

There is a line in the movie "The Great Buddha": "

Although we are in the space age, humans have long been able to go to the moon in spaceships, but they will never be able to explore the hearts of others. Universe.

" Then I hope this book list can help you uncover the mysteries of the inner universe in the space age.

"The Flame Within" is Chen Sian's latest collection of short stories. It consists of three parts: "The Flame Within", "The Parrot's Ventriloquism" and "The Ventriloquist", with *** fifty-eight articles. novel. I paid attention to this book because of Nishikawa's evaluation: "Her novels are somewhat fanciful fables, and her evil and impactful writing distances herself from the mediocre writing around us." Simply read a few short stories, and you will be able to I found that this is by no means an excessive compliment, but a pertinent description - the author starts from the daily life that we are most familiar with, but uses the subtleties to use his imagination beyond the universe, and explores the relationship between people. The subtle relationship between people and their position in the world, and then explore the most subtle human ideology

And the fire that beats in the author's body is likely to turn into a flash of inspiration for the reader.

Born in 1973 in Bielefeld, Germany. Since 1992, he has worked as a freelance journalist and started writing columns, and eventually became an award-winning, global best-selling author.

"Sea of ??Dreams" is her second full-length work after the best-selling book "Little Paris Bookstore" published in 2013. Perhaps many of us have thought about it,

What will we or our loved ones experience when we are dying?

Henry, a successful war reporter, was in contact with Su The son he had never met fell into a coma the day before he met him. During his long period of half-dream and half-awake, he kept meeting and separating from important characters in his life. Under the distorted narration of space and time, you will experience the psychedelic experience of watching David Lynch's "Mulholland Drive", and suddenly understand life in ignorance.

Southeast Asia’s warm tropical climate and mysterious oriental fantasy have always fascinated Westerners, but modernity and war here have disillusioned them. "The Land Blows by the Monsoon" is a reflection and analysis on the modernization process of Southeast Asia and the problems it faces. The author Michael Vatijotis has lived in Southeast Asia for nearly 40 years. He has served as a reporter for the BBC, an editor of the Far Eastern Economic Review, and a mediator in conflict mediation. His writing is not only true and professional, but also reveals a real sense of the local people. The "cares and worries" of life.

When I went to a new book sharing session held by Wenjing at Jiantou Bookstore, I heard the guest say that when you think of this book as

the lecture notes or table of contents of a course

When you read it, you can understand the structure of this book: each chapter seems to open a new question. When you want to delve deeper, you find that you can only look up other information.

Attachment: Click here to read

Exclusive interview with Yang Xiao

The most shocking story only needs the simplest telling

——This is My feelings after reading this book. The excerpted chapters about "Shenzhou V Launch" circulated on Weibo are fascinating enough. As an autobiography covering Yang Liwei's life, the richness of details and the exclusive content of this book are not the biggest highlights, but the most important It is the "experience" it brings to the reader: it is like reading a person's personality.

For example, honesty, humor, and sharing. After reading this book, I have to admire the aerospace hero's "mindfulness" and concentration. Contents such as collectivism, discipline, ideals, and beliefs that are rarely discussed in this era also shine brightly under Yang Liwei's noble personality.

"Earth 2.0" is a popular science book about mankind's continuous exploration of the future possibilities of the earth and even the universe. It is authorized to be published by the British BBC "Focus" magazine.

The book not only outlines most of the space theories that humans understand so far - the big bang, relativity, gravitational waves, dark matter, etc., the comprehensive interpretation at once not only provides the theoretical basis for building Earth 2.0, It also focuses on the population, resources, climate, environment and other issues facing the earth today, and explores solutions with readers together. It is a true guide to the first construction of the earth for mankind.

In this book, you can explore the various possibilities of human homes in the universe, not only to pursue the meaning of life, but also to explore those unknown intelligent life forms.

A common misunderstanding about stargazing is that it is an activity with a high threshold. In fact, many wonders of the night sky can be experienced without any effort or money. All you need is a practical guide.

The author has summarized 57 must-see night sky wonders from nearly 50 years of stargazing experience.

In addition to in-depth astronomical knowledge, the highlight of this book is to tell you - when can you observe stars with the naked eye? How to choose the right telescope? How to use the app? How to check relevant information?

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People sacrifice their sleep time just to see as much of the universe as possible. Whether it is meteors, solar eclipses, auroras or phantom moons, these wonderful and mysterious astronomical phenomena not only provide a special viewing experience, but also reveal certain basic aspects of the vast universe to even the smallest humans. The author shares his approach to the universe without reservation because he believes that the beauty of the universe belongs to everyone.

Audiences who have watched the first season of "Love, Death and Robots" will not fail to remember this episode. With rough brushstrokes and deep tones, artist Qima disassembled himself in the last work , transformed into what it was originally - a swimming pool cleaning robot. The original author of this book, Alastair Reynolds, is David Fincher's regular screenwriter. He personally adapted his short stories "Zimalan" and "Beyond the Aquila Rift" into "Love Dead" Episodes 7 and 14 of the first season, and the book "Qi Ma Lan" contains 13 science fiction short stories including "Qi Ma Lan". Some of these stories take place in the near future on earth, and some is a new space opera across the galaxy, but it maintains Reynolds' writing style: unbridled imagination, eclectic expressions, profound ideological connotations, and in science fiction stories

Constantly Asking Philosophy

"Wild Future" is a collection of science fiction realism novels. Although the characters in the novel, such as taxi drivers, portrait photographers, and airport security guards, live in the future, they are consciously or unconsciously Return to the old life, keep the old habits, and be satisfied with the "backward" state. These people who live in the future seem to have found a way to avoid anxiety. In these stories, we can clearly distinguish whether we

are truly alive

Now we live in a cyber world where the Internet is everywhere. The space is extremely limited, and this book also well describes the spiritual dilemma of modern humans under the impact of information.

The mirror is a very fascinating theme, not only because of the auxiliary role it can play in the mysterious field of "knowing yourself", but also because of the thinking space behind it that can be extended to the fields of literature, art and philosophy. Extremely vast. This book is a very "fluid" account of this vast space.

The author Wu Hung is a knowledgeable art historian and a fascinating storyteller. He uses modern full-length mirrors as the protagonist,

connecting luxury goods, paintings, and images in global circulation, and exploring how these circulations occur.

From Versailles to the Forbidden City, from Yihongyuan to Yangxin Hall, from commemorative photos of braid cutting in 1911 to Morisot's "Psyche", the text is small and the big is large, and the pictures are rich and exquisite, making it easy to read. Lots of fun.

Swipe to see the inner pages

It is like a bouquet of freshly collected flowers, compiled into a book and delivered to your hands. From roadside chrysanthemums to exotic greenhouse lilies, botanical illustrator Adriana Peake has collected specimens from around the world to create this illustrated collection of hundreds of flowers from 27 families. This book is not only organized according to different subjects, but also shows the characteristics of flowers through close-ups, cross-sections, and illustrations of flowers and leaves. It also tells the folklore, cultural traditions, and floral connotations behind flowers from the author's unique female perspective, making the whole book more accessible. This book has become

the most beautiful and conspicuous book

on the bookshelf.

This book collects twenty short stories written by Joan Dean, a contemporary American cultural icon, in the 1960s. In her fragmented narrative, we can glimpse the disordered reality under the surface of American prosperity after World War II.

When talking about why she chose the title "Wandering to Bethlehem", Joan Dean said that this article represents her first direct and candid contact and description of the dispersion of things. Evidence, proof that everything is disintegrating. In this land of nothingness, writing is no different than sailing on land. If those almost ridiculous disguises are torn apart, what is revealed is the true soul of a special era in the United States.

"Ping Ru Meitang: The Story of Us" is the author Rao Pingru's memory of the time they spent together after the death of his lifelong wife Mao Meitang through brushes and words. It was not easy to stay together for sixty years, including war, labor reform, and illness. Even if they were separated, they still chose to use a letter to cross the mountains and seas to accompany each other.

The story finally ended in April last year, "Pingru went to find his Mei Tang."

"Ping Ru Mei Tang" is more like the title of the book from the reader's perspective, allowing people to witness this touching relationship from a third-party perspective "standing outside the painting"; and "The Two of Us" "Story" corresponds to the subjective expression of the text part. The author describes the lives of the two people in the first-person tone of "I".

But no matter which perspective and tone, all the lines, colors and words in the book actually add weight to the sentence on the back cover:

The sea is not deep, I miss you A person is deeper than the sea.

Famous British novelist David M. Barnett's another masterpiece following "The Lonely Dreamer" tells the story of Jenny, a girl who insists on switching to film studies, and her relationship with "Sunset" after she fell out with her parents. A wonderful story about the meeting of weirdos in the "Promenade" apartment.

This book is not only a tender review of encounters between people, but also

an encyclopedia of "film noir"

. Here you can not only watch Billy Wilder's greatest work "Double Indemnity" with Jenny and her friends, but you will also not miss Hitchcock's classic feature film "Vertigo". Perhaps in these movies, Jenny and her friends have found their own ultimate answers.

Finnish female writer Selja Vahava's second work "Nothing Happens Here" explores an important question:

Will time really heal everything?

For the little girl Sarah and her father, "time heals everything" is nonsense. Faced with their mother's plane crash, the father and daughter seemed to be trapped in time forever.

And when her father gradually recovers from the pain, where will Sarah's time go? Selja Vahava tells a warm story in an extremely cold place with light strokes. Sometimes "nothing happens" is a good thing.

If we want to read the most honest self-analysis, "Leave Me Alone" is a book that cannot be missed.

In the winter of 1930, the author Marcelle Sauvage, who suffered from tuberculosis, was forced to live in a sanatorium alone, and at the same time received a breakup letter from her lover. She wrote four unsent replies, each line revealing a terse sadness and a bravery in the face of death. Although Sauvage unfortunately died of illness four years later, the female dignity she revealed in these letters moved countless French writers and made these letters popular in the 1990s. It has been reprinted over the years and even staged. This novel is like "Lover's Whispers" from a female perspective. It tells not only love, but also the life of a sensitive intellectual woman.

The dual identities of neuroscientist and writer allow Oliver Sacks’ words to function like a medical microscope: in the book "First Love, Last Story", he magnified his past eighty years. The various memories and stories experienced in his life are projected onto the macroscopic curtain of the entire human life and living world.

This book

continuously shuttles between brain science, mental cognition, natural history, and art

It covers the period from the 1980s to just before Sachs’s death. The nearly forty articles written by Zhou describe for us the childhood memories, clinical experiences and later life reflections of the "Shakespeare of Science", leading readers to think about the complexity of human existence.

55 recipes that touch the soul of the Chinese people, 14 dining table observations that combine knowledge and culture, market scenes across 6 cities, and more than 800 on-site photography works, together create a An exquisite sketch of a contemporary Chinese dining table. There are not only practical secrets published by famous chefs in the book, but also interesting stories about food production, cooking principles, food culture and other aspects. After reading this, I realized that Chinese people know how to eat, not only because we love to eat, but also because we understand the way of life represented by "eating" and the unique value of common people's wisdom.

In an era of declining personal privacy, we are constantly struggling to balance self-promotion with overexposure. The author's purpose in writing this book "The Age of No Privacy" is very simple: to share the value and joy of "not being seen" with everyone who is under social pressure.

The author is good at using the small daily things that you and I have experienced as a starting point to start thinking about "disappearance". The discussion spans many fields such as psychology, sociology, literature and art, from Facebook to "Mrs. Dalloway" to the landscape of Iceland. The writing is full of quotes and provides us with new perspectives for observing familiar things. Although

it revolves around the sensitive and serious topic of "privacy"

, there is poetry and tranquility running through it, making it easy for both "social control" and "social phobia" "You can all learn the comfortable and practical "way to disappear" to find your own time.

Robert Iger, chairman and CEO of Disney, the world's largest entertainment company, reviews his 45-year career in the book and shares super IPs such as "Avengers" and "Star Wars" for the first time The birth process of "As the main content of this book, because the narrative perspective comes entirely from Robert Egger, you can see many touching details." From the prologue stage alone, the thrilling process of the week before the opening of Shanghai Disneyland is presented. Within a week, there are many difficulties, but you will find that in the process of solving all difficulties, Robert

In addition to having to use professional knowledge His "calmness" also contained his own uncontrollable emotions and tears

. We see a father figure and a friend-like colleague, which is probably more in line with the image of Disney in our minds, and is also different from most success studies and large company methodologies. This book is not a "work" of the Disney Company, but it is a bonus work of Disney.

Written by: Andy, Ma Shark, J, HaN, Lili How to draw a handwritten newspaper about plants

How to draw a handwritten newspaper about plants is as follows:

First write the slogan "Green Paradise" at the top.

Then draw a writing box and tree on the left.

Then draw two different shapes of writing boxes and flower decorations on the right side.

Finally, paint all the drawn elements with the corresponding colors.

Plants are one of the main forms of life, including familiar organisms such as trees, shrubs, vines, grasses, ferns, green algae, and lichens. Plants can be divided into seed plants, bryophytes, ferns, etc. It is estimated that there are about 450,000 species in existence.

Green plants obtain most of their energy from sunlight through photosynthesis. Temperature, humidity, light, and fresh water are the basic needs for plant survival.

Angiosperms have six major organs: roots, stems, leaves, flowers, fruits, and seeds. Green plants have the ability to photosynthesize - with the help of light energy and chlorophyll, under the catalysis of enzymes, they use water, inorganic salts and carbon dioxide to perform photosynthesis, release oxygen, and produce glucose and other organic matter for use by the plant body.

In nature, all living organisms are living things. Organisms should be divided into several kingdoms. Organisms that can live stationary and autotrophic are called the plant kingdom, or plants for short.

Plants have obvious cell walls and nuclei, and their cell walls are composed of cellulose, a glucose polymer. Plants have the ability to photosynthesize - that is, they can use water, minerals and carbon dioxide to produce food with the help of light energy and chlorophyll that is not available in animals. After the oxygen is released, what remains is glucose - an energy-rich substance that serves as a building block of plant cells.