
Missing Father
by Ji Jingrong
About This Novel
Yayan, a Chinese language teacher in a small town middle school, suffered long-term domestic violence from her husband Ronghua, which caused serious physical and mental damage to her, and made her only daughter Chu Ran miserable. Before Chu Ran's college entrance examination, Rong Hua was violently violent again after drinking. In order to save his mother, Chu Ran hit his father on the head twice with a rolling pin. For the first time in his life, Rong Hua was resisted by his wife and daughter. He was stunned for a moment and was at a loss when faced with the kitchen knives and rolling pins in their hands. He found a step for himself and went out to buy wine, but he was never heard from again. The matter became an unsolved case. Ronghua's mother, Wu Fang, firmly believed that her son had been beaten to death by her granddaughter and his body was secretly buried by her daughter-in-law and granddaughter. But she did not dare to speak out and only asked repeatedly in private. The mother and daughter firmly denied it. Wu Fang suffered from internal and external burns and was unable to do anything. She suffered from aphasia. On the other hand, on the night Rong Hua disappeared, the supermarket owner in the town and the night guard all saw him sitting under a tree drinking, and it was clear that he was still alive before the rain came. Where is he...
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(9)Scraped 23d ago
In fact, I vaguely guessed the ending at the beginning, but I still felt uncomfortable when I saw the ending. But in this way, Chu Ran could truly let go and be truly free! In fact, I agree with some of the author's views! Why must we wait until substantial harm is done before the perpetrator can be punished? Mental harm is often more violent and profound than physical harm, and is more difficult to heal! I really recommend this book, we should all have the ability to protect ourselves!
Worth a look! Opposing violence starts with you and me
A heart-shaking book about violence being the original sin.
Chu Ran is great! Chu Ran is great! Chu Ran is great!
Shocking, violence will return.
Depressed, angry, as if struck with a stick.
good
Later I felt like I was looking for a story deliberately.
You can film Mist Theater, it's a good subject matter, and the ending is good or not.
Worth a look! The disappearing father is Chu Ran's disappearing happiness and Chu Ran's inner demon. The moment he is finally relieved is the real relief.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(9)Scraped 23d ago
In fact, I vaguely guessed the ending at the beginning, but I still felt uncomfortable when I saw the ending. But in this way, Chu Ran could truly let go and be truly free! In fact, I agree with some of the author's views! Why must we wait until substantial harm is done before the perpetrator can be punished? Mental harm is often more violent and profound than physical harm, and is more difficult to heal! I really recommend this book, we should all have the ability to protect ourselves!
Worth a look! Opposing violence starts with you and me
A heart-shaking book about violence being the original sin.
Chu Ran is great! Chu Ran is great! Chu Ran is great!
Shocking, violence will return.
Depressed, angry, as if struck with a stick.
good
Later I felt like I was looking for a story deliberately.
You can film Mist Theater, it's a good subject matter, and the ending is good or not.
Worth a look! The disappearing father is Chu Ran's disappearing happiness and Chu Ran's inner demon. The moment he is finally relieved is the real relief.
