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我国明末清初文学家蒲松龄,曾在乡下摆设茶摊,请过路的人喝茶,抽烟,讲故事。他把路人的故事收集加工,最终写成了传世古典名著《聊斋志异》。而如今,在大洋彼岸的美国首府华盛顿,也有这样一个年轻人。他拿着麦克风上街,专找普通市民聊天,收集他们的故事,甚至辞掉了联邦财政部的工作。他就是要通过这样在路上的采访,从最现实的视角和平实的语言,编写一部华盛顿普通人的历史。
Pu Songling, a writer and writer in the late Ming and early Qing dynasties, once set up a tea stand in the country. He asked passers-by to drink tea, smoke cigarettes and tell stories. He collected and processed the stories of pedestrians and eventually wrote the classic masterpiece “Strange Tales of Liaozhai.” Today, there is such a young man in Washington, the capital of the United States across the Atlantic. He took the microphone to the streets, looking for ordinary citizens to chat, collect their stories, and even quit the work of the Federal Ministry of Finance. He is going to write an ordinary Washingtonian history from the most realistic perspective and plain language through such an interview on the road.