My Ancient Chinese Book List 2 (Only the Final Text)Overall rating: 3 stars
Have you finished reading: Skip the second half
Whether to review: No
Author's brief comment: Farming style, very plain
Hostess design: A time-traveling heroine who was a doctor in her previous life. She has a golden finger and can use modern medical tools. She has a kind nature and is hardworking.
Male protagonist design: Reborn male protagonist, the only son of the late Emperor of Northern Yan, handsome in appearance, outstanding in skills, and able to control beasts
Supporting character design: Group portrait, basically a family, plus their respective CPs and children, there are many supporting characters, not a background, but not particularly full either
Plot line: The heroine travels back in time and becomes a little princess who was demoted to a remote place by the little emperor who made trouble for her family. She uses space and medical skills to improve her family's living environment, and they settle down together in the local area to run a life. They each have their own marriages. In the end, because the little emperor commits suicide, the heroine's father returns to the capital to succeed to the throne. The male protagonist also returns to the Yan Kingdom in the extra story to overthrow the queen mother who killed his mother, ascend the throne and proclaim himself emperor, and welcome the female protagonist as his queen.
Emotional line: There is interaction at the beginning. I really like the CP settings of the male and female protagonists, but there are very few scenes from the middle on.
Completeness: Skip to the end to see a complete main line. However, there are too many storylines about life in a mountain village, a family, a couple of CPs in the middle and later stages, and the final return to Beijing to become a leader only lasts for dozens of chapters, which seems very childish.
Extras: The heroine's second brother, third brother, plus the male and female protagonist's follow-up extras.
Writing style: plain narrative style, straightforward but smooth and readable
Brief comment:
Because I wanted to see the male and female protagonists working hard to manage their lives together, I looked for some similar articles.
The beginning of this book is okay. Although the heroine's gold finger is too big, she suddenly knows medical skills, and can take out a lot of modern equipment, but no one around her suspects it, which is a bit outrageous.
It gets more and more sluggish from the middle on. The heroines and sisters can each write dozens of chapters, and the male and female protagonists are not even as supporting roles in the middle scenes. But I obviously wanted to watch the male and female protagonists at the beginning, so I skipped some plots in the middle and found that it had no impact at all.
Then there is the heroine in the article. From the heroine's father, down to the male protagonist, and several brothers, they all emphasize that they don't like to be the emperor, which is a bit excessive. Being an emperor is not free, but ordinary people are not free either.