
The Taoist Has No Heart·overseas Chapter
by Yan Leisheng
About This Novel
"The Taoist Has No Heart (Overseas Chapter)" is divided into four volumes: "Treading the Sea", "Walking in the Fire", "Breaking the Stone" and "Conquering the Sky". Each volume is an independent chapter, but it is connected layer by layer, with thousands of miles of threads, and together they condense into a splendid fantasy world. The protagonist Wu Xin was misunderstood by his master in the first part of "The Taoist Wu Xin·Hai Nei Chapter" and was hunted down. He had no choice but to take a boat out to sea with his lover Salina, and successively arrived in Shanmaxi, ancient India, Egypt and other places, encountered a series of dangers, and also solved a series of conspiracies. Many forces including the remnants of the Southern Song Dynasty clan, the Fire Sky Sect, the Naga Hermits, and the Twelve Apostles of the Knights Templar were involved, and they had no intention of coping with the ever-changing situation by keeping Taoism unchanged.
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(7)Scraped 21d ago
The name is just too long
The book is very good, but it's a bit confusing
Looking forward to Europe
I like this story, extraordinary imagination
The book you bought is not at hand, so read it electronically
Awesome
It's very beautiful. I recommend you check it out.
Looking forward to the sequel
To be continued, come on, come on, Yanda, come on, come on
Although spells are everywhere, it is a pure martial arts novel
Wonderful writing, informative historical materials, and legendary plot
The Taoist has no intention, but the listener has intention.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(7)Scraped 21d ago
The name is just too long
The book is very good, but it's a bit confusing
Looking forward to Europe
I like this story, extraordinary imagination
The book you bought is not at hand, so read it electronically
Awesome
It's very beautiful. I recommend you check it out.
Looking forward to the sequel
To be continued, come on, come on, Yanda, come on, come on
Although spells are everywhere, it is a pure martial arts novel
Wonderful writing, informative historical materials, and legendary plot
The Taoist has no intention, but the listener has intention.
