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What are Lu Xun's picture books?
Collection of novels: Scream, Wandering and New Stories; (The True Story of Ah Q is included in Scream)

Prose Collection: Flowers in the Morning and Flowers in the Evening (formerly known as "Coming Back to Life")

Literary works: a brief history of China's novels;

Prose poetry anthology: weeds

Prose: Talking about Foreign Languages

Essays: Grave Robbery, Hot Wind Collection, Gai Hua Collection, Continued Gai Hua Collection, Southern Tune and Northern Mobilization Collection, Three Idle Collection, Two-hearted Collection, Jiaji Collection, Lace Literature, Pseudo-free Book, Attached Collection, Quasi-romantic Talk, Episode Collection, Jiejieting Miscellaneous Collection.

Lu Xun's anthology "Gang Ji" anthology "Lu Xun Biography"; Selected works of pseudo-free books: Weeds, Morning Flowers and Scream; Jie Jie Ting Prose Collection and Two Hearts Collection; The True Story of Ah Q is a masterpiece in the history of modern literature in China: White Light, Dragon Boat Festival, Storm, Hometown and Kong Yiji. 1965438+In May 2008, Diary of a Madman, the first vernacular novel in China history, was first published under the pseudonym of Lu Xun. Later, he published Tomorrow, Social Drama, Hair Story, Rabbit and Cat, A Little Thing, A Duck's Comedy, Medicine, Hesitation, Blessing, Brothers, In a Restaurant, Mourning the Past, Divorce, and The Past. Drop, talk about the collapse of the Leifeng Tower, talk about beards, talk about photography, look in the mirror, write under the lamp, chat in late spring, and talk about "fuck!" Miscellaneous Notes, From Beard to Teeth, Widowhood, Hard-line and Wild School, On Fu Yi Yi Should Walk Slowly, Written on the Grave, Mr. Fujino, Father's Disease, Gai Hua Collection, Mobilization from the South to the North, and Two Essays of Jie Ting,

Dozens of novels, essays, poems and essays by Mr. Lu Xun were selected into Chinese textbooks for primary and secondary schools, and novels such as Blessing and The True Story of Ah Q were adapted into movies. Lu Xun's museums and memorials have been established in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Xiamen and Zhejiang, and his works have been translated into more than 50 languages including English, Japanese, Russian, Spanish and French.