
Bourne Mystery Cloud
About This Novel
In the twenty-third year of the war, Han Lin came to a war-torn era. With the help of historical memory, he entered the battlefield where gunpowder smoke could not be seen. One person has a thousand faces, the Bourne Supremacy is a reality!
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(19)Scraped 20d ago
Too long and too expensive
With more than 1,500 chapters, even if I prefer spy novels, I can only stay away from it. There are still fees. Even if you use the 50% discount card, it will cost thousands of reading coins. I can only sigh in despair. Time and money are the two greatest aids to reading, but unfortunately I have none. A common problem in espionage articles is to glorify military commanders, as if military commanders were the only ones fighting the intelligence war against Japan, and as if military commanders were the only ones who defeated Japanese spies. As everyone knows, the United States was the best in intelligence operations against Japan, such as the Midway Islands and the sniper Yamamoto Isoroku. The U. S.'S operations against Japan were basically able to achieve one-way transparency on the battlefield, all due to the contribution of naval intelligence experts. The picture below shows experts analyzing intelligence.
I don't like having affairs with Japanese women. Why can't spies be caught in spy novels now if they don't have anything to do with Japanese women? ? ? Why are you so nice to them? I arrest or interrogate male spies and let them go in every way. They are so valuable. I don't like the protagonist joining them as a Chinese. In my opinion, it is a traitor. You can use the identity of a Japanese.
The author has trampled the reader's intelligence to the ground and crushed it. The writing is really rubbish. The protagonist's abilities are a bit too strong. He has the Eye of God and can describe the special dishes of Japanese spies without any brains. It seems that he is very powerful. Moreover, it seems that there is no agent with an above-average IQ in the Secret Service. He is the only one who is powerful and can catch Japanese spies. It seems that everyone else is trash. The more it is written like this, the more it highlights the garbage of this book. The target of a good book should at least have a back-and-forth with the protagonist, and each character should have their own characteristics. Also, the name Dai Li was really drunk during this period in the Secret Service. He called him like this in front of Dai Li. This kind of title should only be used when meeting certain secret service colleagues. Most of the time, shouldn't he be called Virgo? As far as spy novels are concerned, I think you can look at The Bourne and My Spy Years. As far as current spy novels are concerned, I think these two authors are the absolute ceiling. At least they write the characteristics of each character well. In this book, I saw that Dai Li did not appear to be a sinister and cunning head of the Secret Service at all, and the Japanese spies in it were also particularly easy to catch. Even though the protagonist has traveled through the halo and has experience in catching modern spies, there is still a gap between the physical fitness of the national agents and the Japanese spies at that time, and there were no accidents during the arrest. Moreover, these spies were old spies from the early days of the Anti-Japanese War and the newly formed National Government Secret Service. To be honest, there was still some gap between the two. The protagonist can have a halo, but it can't be too outrageous and make the readers think they are nothing...
I don't know if it's my imagination, the plot, or the jump in pace. It always looks like it's out of chapter. I've read too many abnormal books, and the normal books are just a bit too normal.
The author has made comprehensive research and writing preparations on major events during the Republic of China, the Nationalist government and the army, and the historical events and background conditions of the Pacific and Far East battlefields during World War II. Along with the timeline of the novel, the bloody intelligence war unfolds step by step and is presented to the readers... The entire novel is written with exquisite writing skills and professional writing skills. It is a spy war novel worth reading! Recommend!
Just follow Uncle Teng's outline. There is no need to use your own brain.
During the Republic of China, you studied at a police academy in China and did not go abroad to study for a doctorate. How could you have graduated at the age of 26?
After more than 400 chapters, shouldn't we talk about the Marco Polo Bridge Incident? Aren't you going to start resisting Japan yet?
The state of Hangzhou should not have Sandianshui. The author mentioned this "zhou" in the article. Is he wrong?
Those who have thoughts about past lives should know that spies will eventually be liquidated.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(19)Scraped 20d ago
Too long and too expensive
With more than 1,500 chapters, even if I prefer spy novels, I can only stay away from it. There are still fees. Even if you use the 50% discount card, it will cost thousands of reading coins. I can only sigh in despair. Time and money are the two greatest aids to reading, but unfortunately I have none. A common problem in espionage articles is to glorify military commanders, as if military commanders were the only ones fighting the intelligence war against Japan, and as if military commanders were the only ones who defeated Japanese spies. As everyone knows, the United States was the best in intelligence operations against Japan, such as the Midway Islands and the sniper Yamamoto Isoroku. The U. S.'S operations against Japan were basically able to achieve one-way transparency on the battlefield, all due to the contribution of naval intelligence experts. The picture below shows experts analyzing intelligence.
I don't like having affairs with Japanese women. Why can't spies be caught in spy novels now if they don't have anything to do with Japanese women? ? ? Why are you so nice to them? I arrest or interrogate male spies and let them go in every way. They are so valuable. I don't like the protagonist joining them as a Chinese. In my opinion, it is a traitor. You can use the identity of a Japanese.
The author has trampled the reader's intelligence to the ground and crushed it. The writing is really rubbish. The protagonist's abilities are a bit too strong. He has the Eye of God and can describe the special dishes of Japanese spies without any brains. It seems that he is very powerful. Moreover, it seems that there is no agent with an above-average IQ in the Secret Service. He is the only one who is powerful and can catch Japanese spies. It seems that everyone else is trash. The more it is written like this, the more it highlights the garbage of this book. The target of a good book should at least have a back-and-forth with the protagonist, and each character should have their own characteristics. Also, the name Dai Li was really drunk during this period in the Secret Service. He called him like this in front of Dai Li. This kind of title should only be used when meeting certain secret service colleagues. Most of the time, shouldn't he be called Virgo? As far as spy novels are concerned, I think you can look at The Bourne and My Spy Years. As far as current spy novels are concerned, I think these two authors are the absolute ceiling. At least they write the characteristics of each character well. In this book, I saw that Dai Li did not appear to be a sinister and cunning head of the Secret Service at all, and the Japanese spies in it were also particularly easy to catch. Even though the protagonist has traveled through the halo and has experience in catching modern spies, there is still a gap between the physical fitness of the national agents and the Japanese spies at that time, and there were no accidents during the arrest. Moreover, these spies were old spies from the early days of the Anti-Japanese War and the newly formed National Government Secret Service. To be honest, there was still some gap between the two. The protagonist can have a halo, but it can't be too outrageous and make the readers think they are nothing...
I don't know if it's my imagination, the plot, or the jump in pace. It always looks like it's out of chapter. I've read too many abnormal books, and the normal books are just a bit too normal.
The author has made comprehensive research and writing preparations on major events during the Republic of China, the Nationalist government and the army, and the historical events and background conditions of the Pacific and Far East battlefields during World War II. Along with the timeline of the novel, the bloody intelligence war unfolds step by step and is presented to the readers... The entire novel is written with exquisite writing skills and professional writing skills. It is a spy war novel worth reading! Recommend!
Just follow Uncle Teng's outline. There is no need to use your own brain.
During the Republic of China, you studied at a police academy in China and did not go abroad to study for a doctorate. How could you have graduated at the age of 26?
After more than 400 chapters, shouldn't we talk about the Marco Polo Bridge Incident? Aren't you going to start resisting Japan yet?
The state of Hangzhou should not have Sandianshui. The author mentioned this "zhou" in the article. Is he wrong?
Those who have thoughts about past lives should know that spies will eventually be liquidated.
Featured in 2 Booklists
Official(2)
Spy grass jelly




The author's conception is really amazing, and all kinds of spy battles are exciting. Han Lin came to a war-torn era, and with the help of memories from history, he entered the battlefield where gunpowder smoke could not be seen. One person has a thousand faces, the Bourne Supremacy is a reality!













