
I Rely on the Convenience Store to Help the Prince Lie Down and Win
by Le 11
About This Novel
Jiang Yue, who works in a convenience store late at night, accidentally collapses the building. When she wakes up, she finds that she has been transported to a strange dynasty. Her family is bare, her parents are dead, she still has young siblings to raise, and she is so poor that she can't even have dinner. Fortunately, when Jiang Yue traveled through time, he was bound to the convenience store. The convenience store became her treasure chest, where she had everything she wanted, food and drink, and she even picked up an alien tsundere along the way. Later she found out that the tsundere's father was none other than the powerful Prince Ning. Jiang Yue said: I am sure about this thigh! If you want to conquer a man's heart, you must first conquer his stomach. Convenience stores have everything you need. The tsundere turns into a fool, cute and cute, eating and drinking. Jiang Yue successfully ascended to power and led her family to win! One day, Aojiao held her hand and asked: "Are you an immortal descended to earth?" Jiang Yue laughed: "I am a pure human being." "I don't believe it..."
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 15d ago
I was a little confused. The previous story was quite interesting, but something felt a little wrong. In the early stage, the male and female protagonists were not familiar with each other. The female protagonist kept asking about the male protagonist's identity. After knowing his identity, she still made jokes like a fox, which was outrageous. The male protagonist's IQ was still online in the early stage, and he didn't fall in love at first sight or fall in love after being rescued, at least not until more than 20 chapters. It's a little bit incomprehensible later on. The male protagonist brings the female protagonist back to his house to be a chef. Although he knows that he is not just a chef, the question the female protagonist asks his grandma is outrageous. Also, when I was sending the male protagonist home, my actions on the female protagonist felt outrageous, so outrageous. The male protagonist's feelings for the female protagonist are also very fast. I don't know how to describe it. I don't have the habit of giving bad reviews or a few stars, so it's just five stars. But if you are as picky as me, I wouldn't recommend it.
More updates to come? Come on, come on, come on, come on, come on ! Check in and vote! Vote!
The final ending is that he is really good
Well written👍👍When I saw the end, I really felt happy for the third master to have a loving family.
The author writes really well
The story is compact and interlocking, making people curious about what will happen next and who is behind the scenes. The pace is also fast and fascinating. Everyone has flesh and blood, their own little thoughts, their own difficulties, and their own thoughts. Everyone's ideas are reasonable, and an idea will not appear suddenly and then be disliked suddenly. It just feels like there are a lot of pits that have not been filled in. The previous plots are all very good, but I don't know why in the last few chapters, the rhythm is a bit messed up. It feels like it shouldn't end so quickly. For example, why did the concubine's temperament change drastically? Who is the mysterious man? Who ordered it? What was said, and what news did the concubine get? Who made the rouge? Since the people around the prince have changed, who gave the latest poisonous rouge to the prince? Were the symptoms the Crown Princess had before were poisoning? Who wants to poison the crown prince and the crown prince's concubine? Why is the third master also suffering from anemia caused by poisoning? Even the Queen Mother has symptoms? Who played such a big game of chess and what was the purpose? Did the prince know? As mentioned earlier, the third prince said that the third prince has contacts with other countries outside. What is the purpose? Is Mo Quan usurping the throne? Does the poisoning have anything to do with the third prince? Who raised the big snake? As mentioned earlier, when the eunuch eats cake, whose back is the ricket in the garden? Why is there an extra child in the cold palace and no one knows about it? These are the things I don't understand. The author's writing is very good, and it's one of the better novels I've ever read. But it feels a bit unfinished and it always feels rushed. So can his children inherit the convenience store? In ancient times, was it really possible to go anywhere without a written ultimatum?
Talk about your views on the book
First of all, the heroine ran away with the hero with her younger brothers and sisters, and encountered bandits. After leaving the bandit's den, she didn't think about escaping to where the hero went, but she sold things while escaping, and even bought a cart and so on. She was speechless. Secondly, you said that you had sent the male protagonist somewhere, but you followed him to his home. Don't you think this is a bit unfair for a woman in the new century? Anyway, I can't guess what the heroine is thinking, it's hard to describe in one sentence.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 15d ago
I was a little confused. The previous story was quite interesting, but something felt a little wrong. In the early stage, the male and female protagonists were not familiar with each other. The female protagonist kept asking about the male protagonist's identity. After knowing his identity, she still made jokes like a fox, which was outrageous. The male protagonist's IQ was still online in the early stage, and he didn't fall in love at first sight or fall in love after being rescued, at least not until more than 20 chapters. It's a little bit incomprehensible later on. The male protagonist brings the female protagonist back to his house to be a chef. Although he knows that he is not just a chef, the question the female protagonist asks his grandma is outrageous. Also, when I was sending the male protagonist home, my actions on the female protagonist felt outrageous, so outrageous. The male protagonist's feelings for the female protagonist are also very fast. I don't know how to describe it. I don't have the habit of giving bad reviews or a few stars, so it's just five stars. But if you are as picky as me, I wouldn't recommend it.
More updates to come? Come on, come on, come on, come on, come on ! Check in and vote! Vote!
The final ending is that he is really good
Well written👍👍When I saw the end, I really felt happy for the third master to have a loving family.
The author writes really well
The story is compact and interlocking, making people curious about what will happen next and who is behind the scenes. The pace is also fast and fascinating. Everyone has flesh and blood, their own little thoughts, their own difficulties, and their own thoughts. Everyone's ideas are reasonable, and an idea will not appear suddenly and then be disliked suddenly. It just feels like there are a lot of pits that have not been filled in. The previous plots are all very good, but I don't know why in the last few chapters, the rhythm is a bit messed up. It feels like it shouldn't end so quickly. For example, why did the concubine's temperament change drastically? Who is the mysterious man? Who ordered it? What was said, and what news did the concubine get? Who made the rouge? Since the people around the prince have changed, who gave the latest poisonous rouge to the prince? Were the symptoms the Crown Princess had before were poisoning? Who wants to poison the crown prince and the crown prince's concubine? Why is the third master also suffering from anemia caused by poisoning? Even the Queen Mother has symptoms? Who played such a big game of chess and what was the purpose? Did the prince know? As mentioned earlier, the third prince said that the third prince has contacts with other countries outside. What is the purpose? Is Mo Quan usurping the throne? Does the poisoning have anything to do with the third prince? Who raised the big snake? As mentioned earlier, when the eunuch eats cake, whose back is the ricket in the garden? Why is there an extra child in the cold palace and no one knows about it? These are the things I don't understand. The author's writing is very good, and it's one of the better novels I've ever read. But it feels a bit unfinished and it always feels rushed. So can his children inherit the convenience store? In ancient times, was it really possible to go anywhere without a written ultimatum?
Talk about your views on the book
First of all, the heroine ran away with the hero with her younger brothers and sisters, and encountered bandits. After leaving the bandit's den, she didn't think about escaping to where the hero went, but she sold things while escaping, and even bought a cart and so on. She was speechless. Secondly, you said that you had sent the male protagonist somewhere, but you followed him to his home. Don't you think this is a bit unfair for a woman in the new century? Anyway, I can't guess what the heroine is thinking, it's hard to describe in one sentence.









