
The Last Taoist Priest (volume 1-3)
by Xia Yi
About This Novel
The ancient Di man wearing fish scales, the resurrected mysterious king, the real Fuso tree... Who is the man in the open jade coffin? The spate of deaths in the funeral parlor are due to broken feng shui or someone causing trouble? My daughter is suffering from reincarnation. Is it a natural punishment or is it due to a reason? The only son also suffered. Who did he offend?
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What Readers Think
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Official(182)Scraped 1mo ago
It's nice to watch, but you won't be able to watch it for free later.
China's Taoist culture has a long history and has a history of thousands of years. There are many masters emerging in endlessly. Over the long history, many records about Tao have been lost in the dust of history or wandered in the folk countryside. Most of the once glorious Taoism has now become a tourist cultural attraction...
The descriptions in the book are powerful enough, almost like watching TV series, and the plot is attractive enough!
When I was five or six years old, my dad told me this novel every night, and I reached the ending before I knew it. Later, I was able to read it myself, and read it two or three more times. This can be considered a childhood book.
Highly recommended
Very well written! A great book not to be missed! Quite fascinating! Highly recommended!
It looks good (⊙o⊙) (⊙o⊙)
666 feels very real
Ever since I read The Last Taoist Priest and Taoist Past, I've been reading other novels of this type that are very boring.
Well written, thoughtfully conceived, and the story is gripping
Three stars, one star for the author's efforts, one star for the content, and one star for the characters. Why not full stars? Personally, I think the ending is too hasty. There may be a second part, so I'm looking forward to it.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(182)Scraped 1mo ago
It's nice to watch, but you won't be able to watch it for free later.
China's Taoist culture has a long history and has a history of thousands of years. There are many masters emerging in endlessly. Over the long history, many records about Tao have been lost in the dust of history or wandered in the folk countryside. Most of the once glorious Taoism has now become a tourist cultural attraction...
The descriptions in the book are powerful enough, almost like watching TV series, and the plot is attractive enough!
When I was five or six years old, my dad told me this novel every night, and I reached the ending before I knew it. Later, I was able to read it myself, and read it two or three more times. This can be considered a childhood book.
Highly recommended
Very well written! A great book not to be missed! Quite fascinating! Highly recommended!
It looks good (⊙o⊙) (⊙o⊙)
666 feels very real
Ever since I read The Last Taoist Priest and Taoist Past, I've been reading other novels of this type that are very boring.
Well written, thoughtfully conceived, and the story is gripping
Three stars, one star for the author's efforts, one star for the content, and one star for the characters. Why not full stars? Personally, I think the ending is too hasty. There may be a second part, so I'm looking forward to it.
Featured in 3 Booklists
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Overall, this book is a relatively good novel. The original intention of this book was to write biographies. The author found that Taoist culture had really been lost too much, so he wrote this book that integrated folk ghost stories, Taoist secrets, Feng Shui and the I Ching, history, myths and legends, and modern archaeology. It should be said that the author combined history, myths, legends, and modern archaeology. Archeology is so closely integrated that readers cannot tell whether it is fiction or reality. From this point of view, one has to admire the author's skill; and what is even more rare is that the author gives a detailed description of the spellcasting process of the protagonist Cha Wenbin, even in each different situation. The different incantations recited are written out one by one, which makes people wonder: Could it be that the author is a close disciple of Cha Wenbin or a member of the same Taoist sect; the most important thing is the purpose of this book. The protagonist Cha Wenbin has done good deeds and accumulated virtues throughout his life, attaches great importance to love and justice, has a breeze on his sleeves, is not afraid of powerful people, and is not greedy for fame and fortune. He is noble and upright. People admire him, adding a glimmer of light to this world that lacks faith and is impetuous and utilitarian. However, he struggled with fate and the way of heaven throughout his life, and ultimately ended up with a bleak end: the death of his parents, the early death of his children, and the death of the Cha family. The way of humanity is insignificant and the way of heaven is vast. What is the so-called way of heaven? Will good and evil have their due retribution in the end? The prosperity fades away and everything becomes empty. As human beings, what do we live for? Fame and wealth? Friendship? Belief? The universe is vast and time and space are endless. What is the significance of the existence of all living beings? The author can't answer it, so let's leave it to the readers to think about it!



Weird ancient villages, chivalrous and courageous Taoist priests of Zhengtian Taoism, bizarre stories about Fengshan, the ancient Shu Kingdom, and the Western Qiang people. Feel the unique mystery and shock of Chinese horror and uncover the secret truth buried by time




