
Three Kingdoms 3: It's up to People to Plan Things
by I
About This Novel
"Three Kingdoms" is the pinnacle work of Eiji Yoshikawa, and it is also the ultimate work of the blend of Chinese culture and Japanese temperament. In Japan, there are countless historians, politicians, entrepreneurs, writers and artists influenced by "Three Kingdoms". They regard "Three Kingdoms" as a historical masterpiece, a comprehensive collection of political strategies, a business war manual and an inspirational book, and learn from it history and culture, ways of success, methods of doing things, leadership theories, etc. There are five volumes in the "Three Kingdoms" series, and this is the third volume, including the Kong Ming Volume and the Red Cliff Volume among the ten volumes. Kong Ming's Scroll: Liu Bei learned from Xu Shu that the sage in Longzhong, Mr. Wolong Zhuge Liang, took Guan Yu and Zhang Fei to visit the thatched cottage three times, and finally met him. The two hit it off immediately, and they chatted about world affairs. Red Cliff Scroll: Zhuge Liang went to Soochow to argue with Jiangdong counselors, and persuaded Sun Quan to unite against Cao Cao. Pang Tong proposed a chain plan to Cao Cao to connect the warships into one. Zhuge Liang first relied on the favorable location and thatched boat to borrow arrows, and then took advantage of the weather to borrow the east wind. Huang Gai pretended to surrender and took the opportunity to burn Red Cliff and defeat Cao's army. The three-legged force is established.
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