Evelyn Waugh's novel "Brideshead Revisited" is about the relationship between two Oxford boys: Charles Rider and Sebastian Fried. This book is for the reader to learn about the introduction and friendship of the Sebastian family. Through the book, Charles is still crazy with Sebastian and his noble family despite the Golden Age of Charles and Sebastian's separate paths ... The novel reflects on the author, before the war, the era of Hooper, And how it threatened to defeat the nobility,
Evelyn Waugh's "Brideshead Revisited" reminds me of the hit PBS show "Downton Abbey". I was not surprised to find an article on the Internet comparing Waugh's classic and "Downton" mini drama. Both involve the British aristocracy of the 1920 's aristocratic aristocracy whom Yuri white imperialism dealing with the British Empire began to decline. But did it fall? I can never tell these things. I think that they still seem to be doing well there, Jin, Stirling's stability and Nick Hornby's alive to be alive. They look good, except Hugh Grant makes only bad movies - Have he ever made a good movie? - David Beckham is far beyond his peak, but still looks very white
After reading Evelyn Waugh 's novel "Brideshead Revisited", Potok decided to become a writer. Potok realized that the force of the first fiction "created the world with words on the paper" as a novel of the world society War, in the life of British Catholics. In order to learn how to write, Potok studied writers' novels such as Ernest Hemingway, William Faulkner, Charles Dickens, Mark Twain. In five years, he spent most of the free time of reading novels by great writers.
At the age of 14, when Potok himself was called "at the same time both in joy and oppression, by definition, by atmospheric fundamentalism." As a young man, he read the Brideshead revisit of the artist Evelyn War and the portrait of Joyce Please give me. These novels, written by Catholic writers in their own traditions, continued to explore the fight between faith and secularism as Potok moved toward the future. Like the people who inspired their writers, The Chosen is a novel from a person in the Jewish tradition - a believer, not skeptical