Unfortunately, different adaptations, summaries, and translated comments from Heidi are all very different, so they fall into one category. My comment is the version of Great Illustrated Classics by Deidre S. Laiken. It has beautiful covers on every other page with a full pen and ink picture, and highland meadow surrounded by flowers and goats and the snow top of the background. It is somewhat surprising that there are long blonde hair and short black hair inside the Heidi's cover.
I have never read Heidi since I was a child. Because the girl who moved from her beloved place is the subject that I find it difficult to read and I have never come back like an adult. But with this spectacular cover this shortened version drew my attention. In most simple books, explanation and atmosphere will be the first. This also applies here. You do not have the feeling of alpine grassland I judged from other comments as one of the merits of the original book. Heidi is passionate about returning to the mountain with her grandfather - we know that she sleeps crying every night - but the author does not address it in detail. This is an important part of the story, but I have to say that I am very happy that she is not here. Other commentators stated that religion plays an important role in the original text, but it does not exist here. People go to church, the pastor is a small role, but lack of religious themes, this seems to be a loss. The book is short - 236 pages, half of which is a picture - this story is for young readers only. A person who wants more can go back to a longer version someday. But this is at least a good introduction. As an older adult, I thought it was very interesting, I am very happy to read it.
Heidi is a novel for kids published by the Swiss writer Johanna Spyri in 1881. Heidi: The year of wandering and learning (German: Heidis Lehr-und Wanderjahre) and Heidi: How to use what she learned (German)): Heidi kann brauchen is a particularly gentle hat. This is a novel about the life of a young girl taking care of the Swiss Alps grandfather. It is written as a "book for children loving children and children" (quoted from the subtitle)
Johanna Spyri's classic childhood novel returns to the new generation. When a mother (Schinz) sent a young orphan Heidi (Steffen) to live with a ruthless and lonely grandfather (Ganz) in the Swiss Alps, they began a struggle. However, Heidi soon melted her grandfather's heart, and the two formed a close relationship. Since Heidi fell in love with her new Alpine family and her friend Peter (Agrippi), the shepherd, her aunt returned to Heidi and Frankfurt and lived with wealthy, young girl riding in wheelchair Clara . Although homesick and outdated, Heidi made the most of her situation and immediately motivated people around her. Screenwriter Petra Volpe and director Alain Gsponer did a new interpretation of Spyri 's energetic heroine and emphasized the harsh reality of Heidi' s situation. The gorgeous lens of the Swiss Alps is totally in contrast to the true depiction of those days, but the situation is so terrible, but the flexibility and originality of Heidi are more remarkable.
Three years later, the detective came back to take Heidi back to Frankfurt. And it became a member of a rich woman named Clara Seiseman. This girl is fascinated by Heidi 's simple familiarity and likes all the interesting and unfortunate events Heidi lacks in the experience of city life. However, Sesemanns' strict domestic housekeeper FräuleinRottenmeier considered family destruction a wasteful illegal act and kept Heidi increasingly suppressed. Immediately, Heidi became very homesick, surprisingly thin and thin. One of her shifts was to learn to read and write, as she went home and wanted to read Peter's blind grandmother. Clara 's grandmother came to see the child and became a friend of Heidi. She said Heidi could ask for relief at any time by praying to God.