As one of the best renowned English novelists in the 18th century,Richardson has created several excellent literary works,among which his first epistolary novel Pamela pioneered English Sentimentalism literature.Since...As one of the best renowned English novelists in the 18th century,Richardson has created several excellent literary works,among which his first epistolary novel Pamela pioneered English Sentimentalism literature.Since publication,Pamela has been paid much attention to and studied by scholars at home and abroad from different perspectives.As for me,I’d like to mainly give an introduction of the research situation of Pamela at home and abroad.It will be of great benefit to promote our comprehensive understanding of the novel,thus bringing us much practical significance.展开更多
The grisly 1937 murder of 19-year-old Pamela Werner was first "solved" by Paul French's award-winning Midnight in Peking. Published in 2011, French's book was a minor sensation, a lurid rickshaw ride...The grisly 1937 murder of 19-year-old Pamela Werner was first "solved" by Paul French's award-winning Midnight in Peking. Published in 2011, French's book was a minor sensation, a lurid rickshaw ride through the fetid nether regions of Beijing society. Now a rival publication by fellow Brit and former policeman Graeme Sheppard claims to overturn that rickshaw and set the record straight.展开更多
文摘As one of the best renowned English novelists in the 18th century,Richardson has created several excellent literary works,among which his first epistolary novel Pamela pioneered English Sentimentalism literature.Since publication,Pamela has been paid much attention to and studied by scholars at home and abroad from different perspectives.As for me,I’d like to mainly give an introduction of the research situation of Pamela at home and abroad.It will be of great benefit to promote our comprehensive understanding of the novel,thus bringing us much practical significance.
文摘The grisly 1937 murder of 19-year-old Pamela Werner was first "solved" by Paul French's award-winning Midnight in Peking. Published in 2011, French's book was a minor sensation, a lurid rickshaw ride through the fetid nether regions of Beijing society. Now a rival publication by fellow Brit and former policeman Graeme Sheppard claims to overturn that rickshaw and set the record straight.