
Fengya Song
About This Novel
Chinese culture reached its peak in the Zhao and Song Dynasties, but there was no Huaxia after Yashan. Success is also graceful, failure is also graceful. Under the elegance, the shadow of betrayal, the tendency to suppress force, and the desire for power have created a lack of openness in overt promotion and covert pursuit, a lack of self-confidence in emphasizing civility and suppressing force, and a lack of self-improvement in striving for power. This kind of elegance is too fragile and cannot withstand any external attack. Whether it is the Western Xia, Liao Kingdom or the Jin Kingdom, Mongolia, they are all Chinese nightmares. As Zhou Shizong's confidant and entrusted person, Zhao Kuangyin's betrayal of the Chai family became an obstacle that he could not overcome in his life. Chai Zongxun, Emperor Gong of the Later Zhou Dynasty, died suddenly in Fangzhou at the age of twenty. His younger brother was either said to be adopted, or died young after adoption, or was missing, and none of them died a good death. The fifth son of Zhou Shizong and the younger brother of Chai Zongxun, King Cao Chai Xirang, lived on the banks of the Qinhuai River, hiding his name. He was inadvertently involved in the undercurrent, and accidentally learned his identity... Where should he go, how would he face the rising Song Dynasty, and how would he deal with the shortcomings of elegance?
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The writing is okay, not many people read it, and it is considered a three-star recommendation.




The writing is good, the plot is smooth, and the historical node is chosen as the eve of the Northern Song Dynasty's destruction of the Southern Tang Dynasty. Few people write about this. The beginning was a bit slow, Huangfu was a bit dissuaded by this plot, but it got better later on.












