Dreaming Back to Qinglian: I Was Li Bai in the Tang Dynasty

Dreaming Back to Qinglian: I Was Li Bai in the Tang Dynasty

by A Member Of The Huang Family

Length:
106Kwords26chapters
Latest:
Ch. 26The Physics of Lushan Falls
Activity:
Updated 3mo agoScraped 4d ago
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About This Novel

As a creative director who has worked hard in the modern workplace and is well versed in marketing and human nature, he wakes up and finds that he has become the fifteen-year-old boy Li Bai during the Kaiyuan period of the Tang Dynasty. He originally thought that what he got was the script of "Wen Chao Gong", and he was going to become a rich man in the prosperous Chang'an. However, the nightmare of wind and sand from Broken Leaf City and a family tree of criminals from his father Li Ke ruthlessly shattered his fantasy. The son of a merchant, his life experience is a mystery. According to the "Liu Dian of the Tang Dynasty", he was deprived of the qualification to participate in the imperial examination for life. The formal door leading to the center of power was welded shut, but he vowed to smash the window to pieces! This is not a simple story about reciting poems, but a passionate legend about a modern soul using "talent" as a sword to fight its way to the sky in a strict feudal barrier. He used the "Memory Palace" to remember things, used modern physics to deconstruct "Pei Min's Sword Dance", and integrated chemical knowledge into "Taoist Alchemy". He killed people with swords in Shu, sailed at high speed on the Yangtze River, and danced with Orchid in a wine shop in Chang'an. From the lofty mountains of Bashu to the splendor of Chang'an, from the "clouds think of clothes and flowers think of faces" beside the Agarwood Pavilion to the raging wars of the Anshi Rebellion. He slept with Du Fu and talked about his family and country, made Gao Lishi take off his boots to trample on the dignity of the powerful, and tried to turn the tide of the Anshi Rebellion with his tactics. But he is always alone. He was the most lively passerby in the Tang Dynasty and the most sober bystander. He has seen through the decay under the prosperity of the prosperous age, but still chooses to embrace this era. This is an epic about **"freedom and shackles"**. Look at a present

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