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Sophie's World - Audiobook app for iPhone and iPad


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Entertainment Book
Developer: 健 李
0.99 USD
Current version: 1.0, last update: 6 years ago
First release : 21 Jul 2017
App size: 0 Bytes

Sophies World, by Jostein Gaarder.
An Audiobook in Chinese.
No ADS, No IAP, No internet connections request.

Sophies World (Norwegian: Sofies verden) is a 1991 novel by Norwegian writer Jostein Gaarder. It follows the events of Sophie Amundsen, a teenage girl living in Norway, and Alberto Knox, a middle-aged philosopher who introduces her to philosophical thinking and the history of philosophy.

Sophie Amundsen (Sofie Amundsen in the Norwegian version) is a 14-year-old girl who lives in Norway in the year 1990.

The book begins with Sophie receiving two messages in her mailbox and a postcard addressed to Hilde Møller Knag. Afterwards, she receives a packet of papers, part of a course in philosophy.

Sophie, without the knowledge of her mother, becomes the student of an old philosopher, Alberto Knox. Alberto teaches her about the history of philosophy. She gets a substantive and understandable review from the Pre-Socratics to Jean-Paul Sartre. Along with the philosophy lessons, Sophie and Alberto try to outwit the mysterious Albert Knag, who appears to have God-like powers, which Alberto finds quite troubling.

Sophie and Albertos entire world is revealed to be a literary construction by Albert Knag as a present for his daughter, Hilde, on her 15th birthday.

As Albert Knag continues to meddle with Sophies life, Alberto helps her fight back by teaching her everything he knows about philosophy. Alberto manages to find a plan so that he and Sophie can finally escape Alberts imagination. The "trick" is performed on Midsummers Eve, after Alberto informs Sophies mother about everything.

Sophies World was originally written in Norwegian and became a best seller in Norway. It won the Deutscher Jugendliteraturpreis in 1994. The English version of the novel was published in 1995, and the book was reported to be the best-selling book in the world in that year. By 2011 the novel had been translated into fifty-nine languages, with over forty million copies in print. It is one of the most commercially successful Norwegian novels outside of Norway, and has been adapted into a film and a PC game.