
Great Country Sea Soul
About This Novel
The sound of artillery in Helgoland Bay, the horror of Dogger Sands, the pride of Coronel and the tragedy of the Falkland Islands, the guerrillas of the Emden, the dazzling test of Lake Tanganyika, and the "rainbow" over Jutland and Scapa Flow that must be mentioned. The tragic World War I left us with too many memories, including blood, suffering, and endless regrets. A college student born in the 1990s traveled through time and was forced to join the German High Seas Fleet. He became famous in the Battle of Helgoland Bay and began a journey of redemption. A pure naval battle novel, without army hegemony, business speculation and 11 farming plots, don't like to stray into it... Book club group: 40246668, bb and bc friends can add it.
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Official(10)Scraped 1mo ago
Forcing William to be the villain is inappropriate... And difficult to resonate... Especially in a country where the military-industrial philosophy of loyalty to the emperor and patriotism prevails...
The author of this book may have read martial arts novels before writing the novel. In short, every word is messed up (comment plus narration)
The wind and rain in summer are very popular cooling remedies...
Good...............
Very good...............
Battleship bombardment...
Battleship bombardment...
Didn't see the pig's feet
Here, I am not targeting this book. I really cannot understand the behavior of European powers in carving up colonies. It is said that it is to expand the market to obtain funds and raw materials, but can't it be done domestically? If you were the only island on earth, would you die? A few people from Robinson Crusoe built modern industry on a small island. The land area of European countries is much larger than that of Robinson Crusoe's island, not to mention the resources and population. How many cents is there on that broken island? Is there any place to spend the money? The raw materials and labor force in the capital market are not as good as those in European countries, but Robinson Crusoe is still living a happy life, why can't you Europeans do the same? Needless to say about agriculture, what we produce is not enough for us to eat. If the market for industrial products is insufficient, we can sell them at reduced prices. This will just improve the living standards of the people. Even if the products cannot be sold, we still need so many raw materials to survive. Can we survive with enough food? As for the labor force, can the indigenous people in the colony work as efficiently as your own workers? Funds? Why do you need it? Our ancestors could barter smoothly, but you, a modern man, are still worried about a piece of shit? To sum up, the European powers' carving up of colonies was purely for fun. If they didn't solve problems themselves, they had to sacrifice others... There may be deeper problems that I haven't discovered, but I believe that Europe can survive without colonies, the industrial revolution will still happen as usual, and technology will not stagnate.
Too messy
I have no idea what the author wrote
Rating
Community(0)
Official(10)Scraped 1mo ago
Forcing William to be the villain is inappropriate... And difficult to resonate... Especially in a country where the military-industrial philosophy of loyalty to the emperor and patriotism prevails...
The author of this book may have read martial arts novels before writing the novel. In short, every word is messed up (comment plus narration)
The wind and rain in summer are very popular cooling remedies...
Good...............
Very good...............
Battleship bombardment...
Battleship bombardment...
Didn't see the pig's feet
Here, I am not targeting this book. I really cannot understand the behavior of European powers in carving up colonies. It is said that it is to expand the market to obtain funds and raw materials, but can't it be done domestically? If you were the only island on earth, would you die? A few people from Robinson Crusoe built modern industry on a small island. The land area of European countries is much larger than that of Robinson Crusoe's island, not to mention the resources and population. How many cents is there on that broken island? Is there any place to spend the money? The raw materials and labor force in the capital market are not as good as those in European countries, but Robinson Crusoe is still living a happy life, why can't you Europeans do the same? Needless to say about agriculture, what we produce is not enough for us to eat. If the market for industrial products is insufficient, we can sell them at reduced prices. This will just improve the living standards of the people. Even if the products cannot be sold, we still need so many raw materials to survive. Can we survive with enough food? As for the labor force, can the indigenous people in the colony work as efficiently as your own workers? Funds? Why do you need it? Our ancestors could barter smoothly, but you, a modern man, are still worried about a piece of shit? To sum up, the European powers' carving up of colonies was purely for fun. If they didn't solve problems themselves, they had to sacrifice others... There may be deeper problems that I haven't discovered, but I believe that Europe can survive without colonies, the industrial revolution will still happen as usual, and technology will not stagnate.
Too messy
I have no idea what the author wrote
Featured in 12 Booklists
Official(12)
This is a World War I story with the Navy as the main line, and the data is grounded and sophisticated. The BB Party should not miss it!




Naval battle, love of BB party




The writing style is very good, and the atmosphere of repeated setbacks and unyielding is revealed everywhere. You will never stop loving it.




It can arouse emotions, the storyline is smooth, and the psychological description of the characters is delicate. Just let him go if there are some mistakes in the information. Read it and get sweaty.













