
Listeners to the Wind: Mountains and Rivers Engraved in Bones
About This Novel
This is a history of the Anti-Japanese War for ordinary people. The underground party led blind doctors, sugarmakers, papermakers, and drummers to use the skills of traditional Chinese medicine to set bones and the wisdom of traditional craftsmanship to protect thousand-year-old ruins in the Jianghan Plain and smash the Japanese army's cultural plunder conspiracy. 1940, Jianghan Plain. The fingertips of blind masseur Chen Mo can feel the dislocation of human bones, but they cannot feel the pain of broken mountains and rivers. When the Japanese "archaeological team" pounced on the Dragon Bone Hill where the prehistoric jade was buried, Chen Mo's ears became the first beacon - he heard the sound of gun bolts in the salesman's code words, took out the defense map of the candy man's guts, and even recognized the early warning of massacre in the "Lotus Fall" by the Blind Beggars. Lao Zhong, an underground party member, used clock repair as a sheath to hide the blade of command: "Chen Mo, what you are touching are human bones. What we want to protect is the root of the national bones!" The blind doctor leads the way, the sugarmaker locks the enemy, the papermaker burns the bandits, and the flower drum girl beats her heart and drums - when the Japanese army's drill tore apart the ancestral veins of China, Chen Mo's blind cane pointed at the blast point: "This needle will pierce your vitality!"
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