Job Recruitment Website - Ranking of immigration countries - How to make a book for parents and children in tabloids, the title is Captain Grant's Children. If you answer well, add 10.

How to make a book for parents and children in tabloids, the title is Captain Grant's Children. If you answer well, add 10.

Duncan, the new ship of Sir Gillina Sail, a Scottish nobleman, caught a shark in the trial. The sailors found a drift bottle in the shark's stomach, and the letters in the bottle were blurred by seawater. According to the remaining handwriting, it can be inferred that this is a distress letter sent by a captain named Grant two years ago. He is trapped somewhere at 37 degrees south latitude. Sir grina Van turned to the British Navy to rescue Captain Grant, but failed. At the request of Captain Grant's children Mary and Andrew robl, they decided to drive their own Duncan to find it. In addition to Mary and Andrew robl, they were accompanied by Grenavan's wife Helen, his good friend Colonel Mike Nabbes, and the French geographer Baganel who mistakenly boarded the Duncan due to carelessness. They searched all the lands at 37 degrees south latitude: Chile, Argentina, inland Australia and New Zealand in South America. There are dangers all the way, but when climbing the alpine glacier, I suddenly encountered an earthquake, crossed the grassland and suffered from drought and flood, and the wild animals on the land were killed by the traitor. They were almost killed by the native cannibals, but they were finally rescued when they were desperate, and finally found Captain Grant on a desert island and successfully returned to Scotland. This is a novel about Scottish national spirit, but the author is French. However, a French geographer in the novel, Baganel, is described as funny: at first, he got on the Duncan by mistake because of taking the wrong boat, and later he went to visit Captain Grant together, thus launching a special "adventure". Along the way, I still made a careless mistake, preparing to learn Spanish but learning Portuguese; He reinterpreted the address information in the drift bottle again and again "without a doubt", only to find that he forgot to explain the name of another desert island in his native French. Even when I wrote the request letter, I wrote the wrong address. Australia spelled New Zealand, but because of this mistake, all the people were saved. However, the author also played a big joke on him. He was stabbed all over his body from his feet to his shoulders when he was captured by the aborigines in New Zealand, but giving him a beautiful and rich wife was also a reward for his great contribution to the expedition. The novel is called "Captain Grant's Children", but not only Mary, the daughter of Captain Grant, and Andrew robl, his son, are the protagonists, but even Sir grina Van is not the protagonist of the novel. Captain Grant's shipwreck stems from his ambition as a Scottish son and daughter: to find an immigrant area completely belonging to Scotland for his dear motherland and let it enjoy independence and happiness that it can't enjoy in Europe. At the beginning of the novel, it describes Sir Grena Van's "Scottish complex" as a scotsman and the contradiction between Scotland and England. Therefore, the "children of Captain Grant" mentioned in the novel should refer to all Scots who support and inherit Grant's "Scottish spirit". The novel does seem a bit laborious, so at first I thought my 10-year-old son, who just entered the fourth grade of primary school, couldn't understand it. The novel is about sailing, so it needs basic geographical knowledge to sort out the clues of story development. Moreover, there are large sections of maritime exploration history in the novel, all of which are told by geographers, which makes the story very complicated and reduces readability. In the process of their "exploration", geographers also explained a lot of geographical knowledge, meteorological knowledge, animal and plant knowledge, local customs, social evolution and so on. This knowledge greatly enriches the reader's encyclopedic knowledge. Some sentences are beautifully described, but they also add too much space, making the ups and downs of the story less compact. However, it always feels good to read the whole book. Especially the "dramatic" ending!