
From Zombie Face to Actor
About This Novel
Ma Zhe, who suffers from hemifacial spasm, accidentally stumbled into the quagmire of the entertainment industry. Fortunately, just by looking at his name, you can tell that he is not a kind person. Whether he says he is in harmony with the world or is complicit, it does not prevent Ma Zhe from standing at the top step by step...
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A new book from the top of the world. Overhead Chinese Entertainment. Thirteen years into the imaginary world, the protagonist with facial nerve damage retired from work and became a security guard for treatment. It happened that students from a local low-level art school planned to make a horror-themed micro-movie here. They took a fancy to the protagonist's appearance and invited him to join the film. The protagonist planned to use this to enter the entertainment industry and it was natural that they hit it off. Why I read this book: This is the author who I have followed N times, including several of his Chinese entertainment books. One feature is that the female characters in the novel are neither villains nor white lotus. They are ordinary tea art masters. 1V1 or multiple Vs, the tea art can be said to be the best I have ever seen in Chinese entertainment literature. Especially nowadays, the general fan orientation of Chinese entertainment stories, even if it is not the kind of single female protagonist - the goddess is the real protagonist, the male protagonist is just a tool to realize the goddess's dream, the fan stories are also white lotus jinchūriki. In reality, any dirty stuff like pulling, hard rubbing, and green tea can be washed away as silly and sweet and wronged. I actually don't like the so-called dark side that's full of conspiracy and calculation and harming people at every step, and I don't really like the popular White Lotus fan side, because in the final analysis, neither side seems to be writing about living people. In this environment, this person's style is set off by his peers. Why not read this book: I haven't read fictional Chinese entertainment stories in a few years, and I wouldn't want to read this book if it wasn't written by this guy, because I've seen a saying before-entertainment stories are essentially alternative fan fiction, and I agree with that, fictional fiction means original writing by fan authors, and if the biggest highlights are gone, it's easy to expose weaknesses. In addition, from the many books I have read, the author is standardly incompetent in the later stages. He starts to get stuck as soon as he reaches the middle stage of writing, and the later stages are either eunuchs or poorly finished. I think this book will be no exception. In general, I'll give it a try. I'll make a comment later depending on the situation.



A new book from the top of the world. Overhead Chinese Entertainment. Thirteen years into the imaginary world, the protagonist with facial nerve damage retired from work and became a security guard for treatment. It happened that students from a local low-level art school planned to make a horror-themed micro-movie here. They took a fancy to the protagonist's appearance and invited him to join the film. The protagonist planned to use this to enter the entertainment industry and it was natural that they hit it off. Why I read this book: This is the author who I have followed N times, including several of his Chinese entertainment books. One feature is that the female characters in the novel are neither villains nor white lotus. They are ordinary tea art masters. 1V1 or multiple Vs, the tea art can be said to be the best I have ever seen in Chinese entertainment literature. Especially nowadays, the general fan orientation of Chinese entertainment stories, even if it is not the kind of single female protagonist - the goddess is the real protagonist, the male protagonist is just a tool to realize the goddess's dream, the fan stories are also white lotus jinchūriki. In reality, any dirty stuff like pulling, hard rubbing, and green tea can be washed away as silly and sweet and wronged. I actually don't like the so-called dark side that's full of conspiracy and calculation and harming people at every step, and I don't really like the popular White Lotus fan side, because in the final analysis, neither side seems to be writing about living people. In this environment, this person's style is set off by his peers. Why not read this book: I haven't read fictional Chinese entertainment stories in a few years, and I wouldn't want to read this book if it wasn't written by this guy, because I've seen a saying before-entertainment stories are essentially alternative fan fiction, and I agree with that, fictional fiction means original writing by fan authors, and if the biggest highlights are gone, it's easy to expose weaknesses. In addition, from the many books I have read, the author is standardly incompetent in the later stages. He starts to get stuck as soon as he reaches the middle stage of writing, and the later stages are either eunuchs or poorly finished. I think this book will be no exception. In general, I'll give it a try. I'll make a comment later depending on the situation.




Ma Zhe, who suffers from hemifacial spasm, stumbled into the quagmire of the entertainment industry. Fortunately, just by looking at his name, you can tell that he is not a kind person.










