
India's Richest Man Starts with Daily Tips
About This Novel
Open your eyes and come to the slums of the mining areas in India and become a poor, low-class untouchable. The arrival of the daily intelligence system completely changed Vijay's life trajectory. [Today's information: There is a five-gram gold ring buried half a meter underground in the neighbor's rabbi's house] [Today's information: The wife of Sheriff Blue in the town had an affair with the son of a flour supplier in the town] [Today's information: Coca-Cola Company has entered India and is looking for distributors in Bhubaneswar] [Today's information: Sitting in the cafe at No. 13 Jeep Street is a down-and-out college student from the Indian Institute of Technology. This person has just dropped out of the information technology major] [Today's information: An actor named Aamir Khan hopes to direct a work of his own, but is suffering from the fact that no rich man is willing to invest]
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 5d ago
It's very well written and the details are just right. Come on.
Being at a lower level in India, and I still think about it, is fattening pigs.
Author, are you Yin Chui? It's quite outrageous to not write about so many places, but to write about India.
The writing is good, try to update as many times as possible, I love reading it
There are too many questions, and the author of the novice article didn't even understand the most basic things.
The most unavoidable issue when writing about India is the issue of caste. If you are from the Vaishya class, the content will not make people look like idiots. The protagonist you designed is a Dalit! It didn't feel like I was reading a novel about India, but rather like a novel about China. A Datli dared to look directly at a Brahmin and asked for a share of the profits. You asked an Indian policeman to rush his daughter to marry you, and you still don't want to! You have no rights now, and you have no wealth or anything. How dare you? Are you drifting away or the Brahmin can't lift the sword? Has India's ruling class been overturned by Dalits and Shudras?
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 5d ago
It's very well written and the details are just right. Come on.
Being at a lower level in India, and I still think about it, is fattening pigs.
Author, are you Yin Chui? It's quite outrageous to not write about so many places, but to write about India.
The writing is good, try to update as many times as possible, I love reading it
There are too many questions, and the author of the novice article didn't even understand the most basic things.
The most unavoidable issue when writing about India is the issue of caste. If you are from the Vaishya class, the content will not make people look like idiots. The protagonist you designed is a Dalit! It didn't feel like I was reading a novel about India, but rather like a novel about China. A Datli dared to look directly at a Brahmin and asked for a share of the profits. You asked an Indian policeman to rush his daughter to marry you, and you still don't want to! You have no rights now, and you have no wealth or anything. How dare you? Are you drifting away or the Brahmin can't lift the sword? Has India's ruling class been overturned by Dalits and Shudras?









