
Passerby or Novelist (collection of Lu Min's Essays)
by Lu Min
About This Novel
From the narrative of the rural Dongba where the sun and the moon are slow and humane, to the mysterious, sad and strange urban undercover series, to the hormonal night talk that directly points to the origin of the body, and more multi-theme variations scattered outside the light of the series, Lu Min has always violated the boundaries of novels and has never been willing to settle for the existing territory and glory. She rejects safe and convenient aesthetics and pursues alone, heading to the next intersection, to a new furry and secluded area, to write one after another similar to "infinite defense" for human nature. This book is the first collection and sincere sharing of nearly 30 creative essays, literary interviews and speeches written by Lu Min in his 20-year writing career. It is real enough and is a frank self-disclosure of the author's long writing process; it is also light enough that you can turn to an offline "novel class" at any page. How can writing free people from the vanity of daily life? What is the Achilles' heel of writing written by people born in the 1970s? How did those vague sources finally turn into stories? How should novel techniques be used? How to give a novel character a name that doesn't take human life lightly? Is it a passerby or a novelist? Turn into this book and watch Lu Min restore the author's barbaric growth and multiple fissions.
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