My grandfather Martin Wickland was born in Hersinn Grand, Sweden on 23rd December 1872. In 1892, he departed from Sweden at the age of 19 and emigrated to the United States where he used Minnesota as his permanent residence. Immigration from Sweden to the United States in the 19th century was primarily for economic reasons but my grandfather emigrated because he wanted religious freedom. My grandfather was raised on a Swedish farm. When I was nine years old, my grandfather left home for a short time.
The history of America is inseparable from the history of immigrants. Or, like Handel said, "Immigrants are American history." In the mid-19th century, immigrants from Germany and Scandinavia played an important role in solving border problems. Irish immigrants work as urban workers and are the major labor force in the construction of transportation networks such as canals, railways and expressways. The human strength of the Allied forces during the civil war is estimated to be due mainly to immigrants who settled in the northern provinces.
Today American Americans strike to emphasize the importance of immigration to American culture, history and economy. Today's "Immigrants-Free Day" is the response to the new government's immigration prevention agenda. It also enables us to think about books - as usual - as usual. As America is a crucible, American literature is always drawing attention from immigrants, exiles and refugees. There are ten writers here, and we can not imagine without American literature. Lolita was a powerful candidate for the wonderful title of "Great American Fiction", Nabokov was born in St. Petersburg, Russia in 1899. His family escaped from Russia after the Russian Revolution, exiled to France and Germany, and eventually settled in the United States. The country of 1940. Here, Nabokov changed from writing in Russian and French to writing in English, and it produced excellent literary works like Lolita, Punin and Pale Fire.