
The Work of the Widow of the Imperial City Secretary
by Qijian
About This Novel
Pei Jing is a modern senior forensic doctor. After burying his adoptive father, he stayed up all night and died suddenly during the autopsy. When he woke up, he found a man claiming to be his father who spent all his wealth to save himself from dying. In order to repay "my father", he joined the Imperial City Department to work as a coworker. He tried his best to show off himself and give full play to his forensic skills. The autopsy knife was about to be turned out of the flower, with a flattering expression on his face, "Sir, look at me, I am super powerful. I am a genius and ruthless. I will definitely be your best work." From then on, the Imperial City Department had a living Hell King female coworker. She could examine corpses that others could not examine. Gu Huan looked at the female subordinate who kept courting him. Wouldn't she fall in love with him? How should I tell her that I only treat her as her subordinate and have no other thoughts? I've shown my kindness to him and tried my best to help him with the autopsy and investigation. He shouldn't kill me again, right? A time-travel female widow with a special life experience × the commander-in-chief of the Imperial City Division who looks cold and self-defeating
What Readers Think
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Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 24d ago
If you like romance, you can read it. If you want to watch suspense and solving crimes, I suggest you run away early. I watched it for "Yu Zuo". I can only say that I was very disappointed. The heroine is a Wu Zuo, but there are basically no highlights about Wu Zuo. After reading more than 70 chapters, 80% of the autopsies are rotting corpses, and I passed it in three or four paragraphs. The remaining investigation highlights are all about the male protagonist. If it weren't for the many emotional scenes, I would have suspected that it was a male movie =_= The author adds a forensic halo to the heroine but cannot solve the case. The hero has integrated the clues to know the murderer, but the heroine is still in the dark. The problem is that the heroine is not stupid. She can draw portraits and write eight-legged strategies. Her knowledge is comparable to that of a serious master. She does not have a low IQ. As a result, she becomes smarter as soon as the case is solved and becomes a green leaf to set off the male protagonist. The quality of the case is actually not high. It is purely to set off how powerful the male protagonist is. The emotional line is also a headache to watch. In order to give the male protagonist a chance, the female protagonist has to be injured, make the male protagonist fall ill, and send him home. The female protagonist has to make a carriage so that she can't sit still to have close contact with the male protagonist. The female protagonist has to get drunk and secretly kiss the male protagonist, a wretched man. The female protagonist has to fall in love with the male protagonist first so that the male protagonist can complement the male protagonist. It gives me a headache. , There is no highlight of the heroine in solving the case that I want to watch, and the emotional drama that I don't really want to watch becomes denser as I go on, and there is also a polyamorous relationship. There are not many career highlights in the 70 chapters of the novel, but there are four or five men who like the heroine, and there are also several female co-stars who like the hero. The female rivalry scene is ready to go, and those who like to watch the bloody scenes are really lucky.
In the first chapter, starting from the male protagonist asking the female protagonist what's going on with her neck, it goes on for several paragraphs, with a lot of "myself, myself" appearing all the time. . . . In fact, the author can use "she" instead of "she" to read more smoothly. Because perspective confusion is easy to occur here, the process of describing and explaining the background in these paragraphs is described from the female protagonist's perspective, but for example, the female protagonist replied to the male protagonist, "It's Guofengshan, a hundred miles outside the city. My father said that he would take me and my mother to Beijing to reunite. On the way through Fengshan, I encountered bandits. When my father found me, I found that I had not completely died, but my mother died at the hands of the bandits." Talk to others and explain how to return what is yours? Is it accurate to say that I am?
The writing is delicate, the storyline is interesting, and there's more to it.
There are typos, but overall it's okay.
The writing content is okay, but there are too many typos and it's a bit troublesome to read.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 24d ago
If you like romance, you can read it. If you want to watch suspense and solving crimes, I suggest you run away early. I watched it for "Yu Zuo". I can only say that I was very disappointed. The heroine is a Wu Zuo, but there are basically no highlights about Wu Zuo. After reading more than 70 chapters, 80% of the autopsies are rotting corpses, and I passed it in three or four paragraphs. The remaining investigation highlights are all about the male protagonist. If it weren't for the many emotional scenes, I would have suspected that it was a male movie =_= The author adds a forensic halo to the heroine but cannot solve the case. The hero has integrated the clues to know the murderer, but the heroine is still in the dark. The problem is that the heroine is not stupid. She can draw portraits and write eight-legged strategies. Her knowledge is comparable to that of a serious master. She does not have a low IQ. As a result, she becomes smarter as soon as the case is solved and becomes a green leaf to set off the male protagonist. The quality of the case is actually not high. It is purely to set off how powerful the male protagonist is. The emotional line is also a headache to watch. In order to give the male protagonist a chance, the female protagonist has to be injured, make the male protagonist fall ill, and send him home. The female protagonist has to make a carriage so that she can't sit still to have close contact with the male protagonist. The female protagonist has to get drunk and secretly kiss the male protagonist, a wretched man. The female protagonist has to fall in love with the male protagonist first so that the male protagonist can complement the male protagonist. It gives me a headache. , There is no highlight of the heroine in solving the case that I want to watch, and the emotional drama that I don't really want to watch becomes denser as I go on, and there is also a polyamorous relationship. There are not many career highlights in the 70 chapters of the novel, but there are four or five men who like the heroine, and there are also several female co-stars who like the hero. The female rivalry scene is ready to go, and those who like to watch the bloody scenes are really lucky.
In the first chapter, starting from the male protagonist asking the female protagonist what's going on with her neck, it goes on for several paragraphs, with a lot of "myself, myself" appearing all the time. . . . In fact, the author can use "she" instead of "she" to read more smoothly. Because perspective confusion is easy to occur here, the process of describing and explaining the background in these paragraphs is described from the female protagonist's perspective, but for example, the female protagonist replied to the male protagonist, "It's Guofengshan, a hundred miles outside the city. My father said that he would take me and my mother to Beijing to reunite. On the way through Fengshan, I encountered bandits. When my father found me, I found that I had not completely died, but my mother died at the hands of the bandits." Talk to others and explain how to return what is yours? Is it accurate to say that I am?
The writing is delicate, the storyline is interesting, and there's more to it.
There are typos, but overall it's okay.
The writing content is okay, but there are too many typos and it's a bit troublesome to read.







