Analysis of Hilton's Lost Horizon "... the horizon rises like a curtain; time grows, space shortens" At James Hilton's "Lost Horizon", readers are immediately fascinated by Hughes and the other three A kidnapped passenger Charles Martinson traveled together, Miss Brinko and Henry Bernard. Hilton started a novel using the literary skills of the framework. At dinner, friends shared insights about life, and soon the neurologists and Conway 's friends developed Conway' s strange adventure story.
I remember reading a fictional place drawn by British writer James Hilton, a wonderful Shangri-La in 1933 novel "The Lost Horizon". He painted Shangri-La as a mysterious and harmonious valley. This myth became synonymous with the Earth paradise, especially the mysterious Himalayan utopia - a country of eternal happiness isolated from the outside world. For me, Tibet is truly this utopia, a non-imaginary Shangri-La artist. Songs, temples, chanting, smiles, horses, mountains of snow ... I am surrounded by Tibet every day; beauty is everywhere. I especially like the light of the Qinghai Tibet Plateau, and Tibetan skin color is very suitable for painting. So Tibet is my Shangri-La, my constant source of inspiration.
Analysis of Hilton's Lost Horizon "... the horizon rises like a curtain; time grows, space shortens" At James Hilton's "Lost Horizon", readers are immediately fascinated by Hughes and the other three A kidnapped passenger Charles Martinson traveled together, Miss Brinko and Henry Bernard. Hilton started a novel using the literary skills of the framework. At dinner, friends shared insights about life, and soon the neurologists and Conway 's friends developed Conway' s strange adventure story.
& Lt; Tab / & gt; Hilton's "Lost Horizon" knows who he is. Conway has many leadership roles, Marinson is an executive, Barnard is a relaxed and easy type, and Miss Brinklo is a fun type. He distinguishes them from other people through their actions and words.
One of my best examples of relatively modern Utopian books is James Hilton's "Lost Horizon". Four people survived, kidnapped in an airplane accident. They were taken to the mountains of Tibet. A mysterious Chinese man took them to a convent hidden in the "Blue Moon Valley". It is a mysterious and beautiful land where life is calm, overcoming the troubles of other worlds. Dystopian can be defined as a society that brings a living environment where suppression, fear, or deprivation is extremely bad. In literature, definitions may include literary works based on imagination, even though they do not necessarily have the truth or facts. Anti-utopian literature is described as fiction, with a negative view on society and the future of mankind