Thousands of Hands and One Heart

Thousands of Hands and One Heart

by Dream Network Man

Length:
76Kwords17chapters
Latest:
Ch. 17Returning to the Temple with His Genealogy to Resume His Duties as a Teacher, Leaving a Suspense at the End of the Volume
Activity:
Updated 20d agoScraped 3d ago
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About This Novel

At the end of Ming Dynasty and the beginning of Qing Dynasty, the world was in chaos. A fire broke out in the Sutra Pavilion of Shaolin Temple overnight, and the treasures of the temple disappeared. The thief of the sutras turned out to be the warrior monk Ye Wujiang. Twenty years later, a young man who claimed to be "nameless" entered the temple to seek Dharma. His fists and feet contained many secrets, and his identity became a mystery. He began to practice the most basic "Three Right" boxing techniques of Luohan Hall. He studied under Cheng Guan Shizuo and received enlightenment from Zen Master Liaochen of Mengzang Sutra Pavilion, gradually realizing the principle of "the unity of Zen and martial arts". When his life experience was revealed - he was actually Ye Wujiang's orphan - the obsession for revenge and the compassion of Buddhism fiercely fought in his heart. The forces of the White Lotus Sect, Mantis Sect, and the Qing court took turns to appear, and the 300-year-old foundation of Shaolin Temple was in jeopardy. From Shaolin to Jianghu, from seeking revenge to enlightenment, Jingchen steps closer to the truth in blood and fire: his father is not a traitor, and his enemy is not purely evil. When he finally faced Xu Hongru, the enemy who killed his father, what he picked up with his fingers was not hatred, but letting go. Siping died in battle at Shanmen, he died and sat in the lantern, and Ananda inherited the mantle. Jingchen finally returned to his old residence in Houshan and practiced the most basic Luohan Quan every morning - clasping his hands together, punching from a horse stance, and pushing palms from a lunge. What he practices is not boxing, but his heart. This is a martial arts novel about foundation and realm, obsession and letting go, inheritance and innovation. Behind the brilliance of the seventy-two stunts, it is the simple truth of "the unity of Zen and martial arts".

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