The Little Prince

· Pelekanos Books
4.7
540 reviews
Ebook
119
Pages

About this ebook

Born in Lyon of France in 1900, Antoine de Saint-Exupéry considered himself primarily as a pilot. For 20 years he made numerous cartography and mailing missions for commercial companies. Air transmissions were the key factor concerning his professional and literature profile. He started writing The Little Prince during the WW II, when he was forced to abandon airforce (due to Germany’s invasion in France) and seek refuge in New York. His great desire of going back, hopefully after the war, is depicted as the nostalgia of being a child again, something that is so evident in Little Prince.

The Sahara desert is the scenery of Little Prince’s story. The narrator’s plane has crashed there and he has scarcely some food and water to survive. Trying to comprehend what caused the crash, the Little Prince appears. The serious blonde little boy asks to draw him a sheep. The narrator consents to the strange fellow’s request. They soon become friends and the Little Prince informs the pilot that he is from a small planet, the asteroid 325, talks to him about the baobabs, his planet volcanoes and the mysterious rose that grew on his planet. He also talks to him about their friendship and the lie that evoked his journey to other planets. Often puzzled by the grown-ups’ behavior, the little traveler becomes a total and eternal symbol of innocence and love, of responsibility and devotion. Through him we get to see how insightful children are and how grown-ups aren’t. Children use their heart to feel what’s really important, not the eyes…

Ratings and reviews

4.7
540 reviews
Steve
September 15, 2022
It's a good read but it's formatting isn't good for reading on your phone. I wish Google books allowed you to enlarge the font rather than just zooming in.
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Sanjana Chowdhury
February 6, 2019
Great book. Unfortunately, this particular translation wasn't the best. For instance, the most famous line of this book reads, "the important is what the eye can't see" (Chapter 21, page 88); it should read, "What is essential is invisible to the eyes."
12 people found this review helpful
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Eveline Sulistio
May 3, 2020
A simple yet deep book! It left a strong impression after I finished reading everything. Each chapter has its own message and let me think or see things differently. The last part was kinda sad, got me a bit teared up, but nevertheless this is a great must read light book. Everyone at any age should try reading this at least once.
18 people found this review helpful
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