
Tai Shang Zhang
About This Novel
A young man who was born in a wilderness, overcame difficulties and obstacles, investigated the source of heaven and earth, climbed to the top of creation, and became the founder of the Tao!
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(148)Scraped 20d ago
elaborate
There was so much laid out that I almost couldn't stand it anymore and gave up...
praise
The details are handled very well, as expected of a young master~
Why isn't such a good book popular?
Came here for the single heroine
It is a rare novel with a single female protagonist. There is no ambiguous male protagonist and a dedicated female partner, and the relationship between the male and female protagonists is also well-written. It is also rare in male-channeled novels.
The whole text contains a lot of historical background, repeated character relationships, and a lot of resumes introduced by passers-by. As a result, I was overwhelmed and tired of reading. It is a mediocre book. The author's choice of subject matter is okay. It mainly does not hold the things of the Indian era that I want to depict. The early stage is a bit imitating the perfect world, so you can read it if you are bored.
Ahem
What the hell is the protagonist called Huwa? When will it be changed back?
How can it be so wordy?
How can it be so wordy? It's indeed okay to write, but can you not be so wordy on purpose?
Worth seeing and even more worth thinking about
I have read all of Xu Gongzi's books, and I am impressed by his writing style, and even more admired by his deep philosophical thinking about the world, society, and life! I hope to see more of his works, preferably new works that can integrate real life! I wish Mr. Xu good thoughts and good health!
book title
The title of the book is good and classy. Very classical and connotative
Finally finished reading
I finally finished reading it, and I was deeply moved by the vows of Mr. Cangjie and the Great Heavenly Lord. I hope that even though I cannot enter the first state, I can still achieve great success in my state of mind. The entire series of Xu Gongzi's books is his worldview, and this chapter of Taishang fully displays his worldview in front of the readers. This presentation is like the sacred land of the Imperial Land. Those who can and are willing to accept it will naturally be able to read on. Although it is plain and simple, they can have big thoughts. Thank you Mr. Xu for teaching me how to be a good person. I hope you will write better works in the future~
Rating
Community(0)
Official(148)Scraped 20d ago
elaborate
There was so much laid out that I almost couldn't stand it anymore and gave up...
praise
The details are handled very well, as expected of a young master~
Why isn't such a good book popular?
Came here for the single heroine
It is a rare novel with a single female protagonist. There is no ambiguous male protagonist and a dedicated female partner, and the relationship between the male and female protagonists is also well-written. It is also rare in male-channeled novels.
The whole text contains a lot of historical background, repeated character relationships, and a lot of resumes introduced by passers-by. As a result, I was overwhelmed and tired of reading. It is a mediocre book. The author's choice of subject matter is okay. It mainly does not hold the things of the Indian era that I want to depict. The early stage is a bit imitating the perfect world, so you can read it if you are bored.
Ahem
What the hell is the protagonist called Huwa? When will it be changed back?
How can it be so wordy?
How can it be so wordy? It's indeed okay to write, but can you not be so wordy on purpose?
Worth seeing and even more worth thinking about
I have read all of Xu Gongzi's books, and I am impressed by his writing style, and even more admired by his deep philosophical thinking about the world, society, and life! I hope to see more of his works, preferably new works that can integrate real life! I wish Mr. Xu good thoughts and good health!
book title
The title of the book is good and classy. Very classical and connotative
Finally finished reading
I finally finished reading it, and I was deeply moved by the vows of Mr. Cangjie and the Great Heavenly Lord. I hope that even though I cannot enter the first state, I can still achieve great success in my state of mind. The entire series of Xu Gongzi's books is his worldview, and this chapter of Taishang fully displays his worldview in front of the readers. This presentation is like the sacred land of the Imperial Land. Those who can and are willing to accept it will naturally be able to read on. Although it is plain and simple, they can have big thoughts. Thank you Mr. Xu for teaching me how to be a good person. I hope you will write better works in the future~
Featured in 212 Booklists
Official(212)
Xu Gongzi's "The Heaven, Earth, Gods, Ghosts, Spirits, Ghosts, Jinghe" and "Tai Shang" sincerely describe the immortal civilization explored by Xu Gongzi. As far as the understanding and creation of Chinese Taoist cultivation culture is concerned, it can be said that Xu Gongzi is the undisputed first person, and "Tai Shang Zhang" Although it is the last book to be completed, this book is actually the source of the existence of the fairy world narrated by Mr. Xu. It is really amazing. This man who spent decades exploring and perfecting the Chinese fairy mythology and civilization is very respectable! Xiancao



A different book, looking at the social evolution of ancient times under the fantasy background from Huwa's perspective, the writing style is very grand




[Single Heroine] The heroine Xuanyuan, as a novel with a single heroine, the protagonist's love story is well written. Except for the fact that she admitted that she was hugged by the wrong person when she met the heroine earlier, there is no ambiguity. [Post Bar·Bingjiche Review] Xu Gongzi's "Tai Shang Zhang" is one-third of the classics. In the first third of the novel, I thought I was about to see the emergence of a true classic online novel. The content and thinking were very interesting, and the three views could not be more correct. Unfortunately, after the third third, the level of the protagonist dropped sharply after entering the Bashi Kingdom. The appearance of Shaowu, who can be called the second male protagonist, marked the novel's slip from quality to excellent. The part where he goes to ask for a hand in marriage from the younger brother simply puts the protagonist's previous explanation of "propriety" under his feet. The rest of it is simply unwatchable compared to the beginning, and there are no highlights until the end when Shaowu unifies the "world". After the middle period, the protagonist becomes an earthly immortal and his great revenge is avenged. In fact, there is no need to continue. However, the author positions this book as the beginning and end of the previous novel series. Limited by the historical constraints of the previous novels, he wrote nearly half of the content. Although it is much more interesting than the plot of Shaowu, which re-deconstructs ancient history, the real shining point is only the wish to set the realm of the Five Emperors. What a shame about the previous volumes.




A born divine being grew up on the ancient earth, comprehended the heaven and earth, practiced and enlightened. The ancient legends described by the author are like being on the scene, and they feel like they are real.













