
I Drove the Mountains with Dogs in Changbai Mountain
About This Novel
As the saying goes, if you rely on the mountains, you will eat the mountains; if you rely on the sea, you will eat the sea. In this era where guns and hunting are not prohibited. Chen Shan, who was a dog-training policeman in his previous life, traveled here, but his parents died, he was hungry and cold, and the farm team in the same village coveted his only companion, the big black dog. Chen Shan: "In this case, then in this life I will raise a pack of dogs, protect farmers and hunt, live a rich life, and conquer this Changbai Mountain!" Heizi: "Woof, woof woof, woof woof!"
What Readers Think
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Official(3)Scraped 12d ago
AI article? The first three chapters made me sick, If this book was written by a real person, all I can say is: it's badly written.
I can't help but have guns, why don't I have any guns? It's fake.
Sorry, I just wanted to ask.
Seeing here (Chapter 58), after the protagonist dug the ginseng and sold the ginseng, the author did not describe the scene where the protagonist divided the money. Did he miss the plot? I personally find this novel quite interesting. It has a lot of room for imagination and brings readers into it. However, it does not mention other contributions to the village, because I think that since they are the guards of the village and use the resources of the village, they do not hand over a certain amount of harvest. Is it unreasonable? There is no relevant discussion between the protagonist and the village leaders, so it is a bit confusing. But thanks to the author for his dedication.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(3)Scraped 12d ago
AI article? The first three chapters made me sick, If this book was written by a real person, all I can say is: it's badly written.
I can't help but have guns, why don't I have any guns? It's fake.
Sorry, I just wanted to ask.
Seeing here (Chapter 58), after the protagonist dug the ginseng and sold the ginseng, the author did not describe the scene where the protagonist divided the money. Did he miss the plot? I personally find this novel quite interesting. It has a lot of room for imagination and brings readers into it. However, it does not mention other contributions to the village, because I think that since they are the guards of the village and use the resources of the village, they do not hand over a certain amount of harvest. Is it unreasonable? There is no relevant discussion between the protagonist and the village leaders, so it is a bit confusing. But thanks to the author for his dedication.









