
The Grass of the Republic of China Wenxiao
About This Novel
He traveled through time and became a rickshaw puller on the scorching streets of Beijing in the 10th year of the Republic of China (1921). Penniless, hungry, thirsty, sweating profusely, and with a long road ahead, Xiangzi thought until his death that the reason he was not doing well was because he didn't pull the cart hard enough...? I can't think about that much anymore. Let's live today, tomorrow, and every day first!
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(28)
The writing is good, but the background setting is too nonsense. A rickshaw puller who has never been to school or been abroad can speak fluent English, can write the history of World War I, and understands astronomy, geography, physics, chemistry, and biology. Are we really stupid, the masters of the Republic of China, or are we, the readers, stupid?
I don't quite understand. What do you do when you keep writing about Jackie Chan? And then you have to tell me what you haven't done.
The protagonist also has no goal. He shoots here and there and has no idea what to do. Without a main plot, the more you look at it, the more tasteless it becomes. It's a pity to abandon it.
Very good. It's rare to see promising works by literary giants of the Republic of China. Update quickly! ! ! ! ! ! !
The plot is okay, but it's too dramatic and too serious to watch.
This book is fascinating in the early stages, but becomes boring in the middle. The protagonist has no sense of involvement at all. He is still helping scumbags like Xu Zhimo. He becomes friends with Liu Zi. To put it bluntly, if you go to the Northeast and call Liu Zi, he will want to beat you. You have done so much charity and built Hope Primary School. It would be strange if the Song family and the Kong family don't treat you like a fat sheep. Not to mention how much influence you have, other people's children can do it in a fight on the street. I suggest you write something that is more enjoyable.
There is a question. In 1949, did the protagonist want to be Mei Yiqi or Chen Yinke?
Xiaofuzi is so beautiful, so bitter, and doesn't accept it. It's really rubbish. You might as well not write it.
The tiger girl in the book died in childbirth, why do you keep writing about it? I don't understand. There's too much nonsense.
I didn't see the system flow. . . . . . . Very good very good
Rating
Community(0)
Official(28)
The writing is good, but the background setting is too nonsense. A rickshaw puller who has never been to school or been abroad can speak fluent English, can write the history of World War I, and understands astronomy, geography, physics, chemistry, and biology. Are we really stupid, the masters of the Republic of China, or are we, the readers, stupid?
I don't quite understand. What do you do when you keep writing about Jackie Chan? And then you have to tell me what you haven't done.
The protagonist also has no goal. He shoots here and there and has no idea what to do. Without a main plot, the more you look at it, the more tasteless it becomes. It's a pity to abandon it.
Very good. It's rare to see promising works by literary giants of the Republic of China. Update quickly! ! ! ! ! ! !
The plot is okay, but it's too dramatic and too serious to watch.
This book is fascinating in the early stages, but becomes boring in the middle. The protagonist has no sense of involvement at all. He is still helping scumbags like Xu Zhimo. He becomes friends with Liu Zi. To put it bluntly, if you go to the Northeast and call Liu Zi, he will want to beat you. You have done so much charity and built Hope Primary School. It would be strange if the Song family and the Kong family don't treat you like a fat sheep. Not to mention how much influence you have, other people's children can do it in a fight on the street. I suggest you write something that is more enjoyable.
There is a question. In 1949, did the protagonist want to be Mei Yiqi or Chen Yinke?
Xiaofuzi is so beautiful, so bitter, and doesn't accept it. It's really rubbish. You might as well not write it.
The tiger girl in the book died in childbirth, why do you keep writing about it? I don't understand. There's too much nonsense.
I didn't see the system flow. . . . . . . Very good very good












