Current location - Recipe Complete Network - Healthy recipes - Who is the author of Boiling Imitation of High Mountains
Who is the author of Boiling Imitation of High Mountains

"Boiling Imitation of High Qunshan" is written by Li Yunde.

The Boiling Mountains of Qunshan is a work published by the People's Literature Publishing House, which made an impact on the whole country and established the writer's position in the Chinese literary world. The work was translated into Japanese by Masao Shimada and published and distributed by Oriental Bookstore in Japan. His works to his own engaged in and familiar with geological exploration and mines as the material, at that time, this kind of work is still rare in the country, reflecting the mines of the book-length tome is also the first time in China.

His works have had a certain impact at home and abroad, he was absorbed as a member of the Chinese Writers' Association, director of the Liaoning Provincial Writers' Association, Liaoning Provincial Literature Union, Anshan City, vice-chairman of the Wen Kufu Drafting Union. From 1954 to the present, more than 40 years of plowing more than, no matter what the circumstances, never stopped writing, *** creation and publication of more than 10 books, published in short stories, reportage, scripts, dozens of essays, is the national prolific and accomplished one of the famous worker writers. He now lives in Anshan City, Liaoning Province.

Li Yunde's works:

Li Yunde began to persist in amateur literary creation in 1954, and published his debut novel "Eggs" in the Liaoning Daily in that year. 1956, the Liaoning People's Publishing House published a collection of his short stories called "The First Lesson of Life", and in 1963, his full-length novel "Song of the Eagle" was published by the Spring Breeze Literary and Art Publishing House. In 1963, his long novel Song of the Eagle was published and distributed by Spring Breeze Literary Publishing House. He later produced the long masterpiece The Boiling Mountains (Parts I, II and III), which became his representative work.