
Traveling Through the Third Reich
by Xia Suruyi
About This Novel
She thought that she, a soldier training in the field, could be unlucky enough to die and travel to Germany during World War II. What a joke. She didn't want to be a victim in World War II. She had better go to the military academy to hone her skills first. .
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(10)Scraped 23d ago
I felt sick when I saw the guy named Lin
God damn white Han people, yellow Han people, they really lick white people like crazy. They also crazily glorified the massacre of Jews. Massacre is massacre, and there is no justice or injustice.
🥹It's really good to watch. I've been liking this kind of subject so much lately. It was when I saw the heroine had a child at the end that I was stunned hahahaha. I blamed myself for not reading the book carefully and not seeing when Jochen and Shirley had a baby. I only saw kisses on the forehead and not on the lips. What did I miss But fortunately, the child is Jochen's and there is a happy ending. Even Karl didn't know that the person he liked was not dead yet, and she was a girl. I felt sorry for Karl for a second, and Horst, oh, he went crazy🥹 It would be great if there was an extra chapter. The author would be great. It would be great to add a chapter.
review
I've read this book a long time ago. I quite like it, the plot is compact and full of ups and downs The author is great! [Emot=default,80/]
? ?
Are there any stories about the Third Reich written by girls? ?
It's great, the story and character experiences are very touching.
It's a very interesting article on the subject of washing squares. After reading it, I couldn't help but look for similar articles, but I couldn't find them on QAQ. I'm looking forward to the next pitfall. I can't wait to jump in. 23333
How should I put it? The emotions are complicated but the writing is good.
This book is really well written. You can come and read it together.
Very good, very good, very good, very good.
Awesome! nice! ! Looking forward to the extra episode! ah! ! !
Nice! Awesome, awesome! Nice! ! Looking forward to the extra episode! Ah! ! !
You've been stared at for a long time, don't you feel it? . . . Why didn't I find it? .
Rating
Community(0)
Official(10)Scraped 23d ago
I felt sick when I saw the guy named Lin
God damn white Han people, yellow Han people, they really lick white people like crazy. They also crazily glorified the massacre of Jews. Massacre is massacre, and there is no justice or injustice.
🥹It's really good to watch. I've been liking this kind of subject so much lately. It was when I saw the heroine had a child at the end that I was stunned hahahaha. I blamed myself for not reading the book carefully and not seeing when Jochen and Shirley had a baby. I only saw kisses on the forehead and not on the lips. What did I miss But fortunately, the child is Jochen's and there is a happy ending. Even Karl didn't know that the person he liked was not dead yet, and she was a girl. I felt sorry for Karl for a second, and Horst, oh, he went crazy🥹 It would be great if there was an extra chapter. The author would be great. It would be great to add a chapter.
review
I've read this book a long time ago. I quite like it, the plot is compact and full of ups and downs The author is great! [Emot=default,80/]
? ?
Are there any stories about the Third Reich written by girls? ?
It's great, the story and character experiences are very touching.
It's a very interesting article on the subject of washing squares. After reading it, I couldn't help but look for similar articles, but I couldn't find them on QAQ. I'm looking forward to the next pitfall. I can't wait to jump in. 23333
How should I put it? The emotions are complicated but the writing is good.
This book is really well written. You can come and read it together.
Very good, very good, very good, very good.
Awesome! nice! ! Looking forward to the extra episode! ah! ! !
Nice! Awesome, awesome! Nice! ! Looking forward to the extra episode! Ah! ! !
You've been stared at for a long time, don't you feel it? . . . Why didn't I find it? .









