
Ming Dynasty: Starting from Liaodong Jiangmen
by Rising Stone
About This Novel
There were disputes in the court, and the Donglin family was the dominant one. There are powerful enemies outside, and the Mongols and Jurchens are vying to knock on the door. In the hinterland of the Central Plains, wandering thieves are swarming, and corpses and bones are piled up in mountains thousands of miles away, making it difficult to return. Li Shunzu, an ordinary government clerk in his previous life, accidentally came to the late Ming Dynasty 500 years ago and became the great-grandson of Ningyuan Bo Li Chengliang and the eldest grandson of Li Rusong, the commander-in-chief of Liaodong. He never wanted to be the hero who saves the world, but things backfired. Seeing with his own eyes the devastated land of China and the widespread corruption in the late Ming Dynasty, Li Shunzu raised his sword in anger. Be disloyal to the emperor, but be loyal to the people. If you don't save the imperial court, save the world! ... ... This book is also known as: "The First Honored Lord in the Late Ming Dynasty", "Beat the Wild Boar Skin", "Who Should Be the Emperor"
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(4)Scraped 6d ago
Did the author have an accident or a pigeon?
You can't become Li Dingguo, Li Guo, Li Laiheng, Sun Chuanting, Li Zijing in the last book, and Li Zijing in this one.
. . . . .
I didn't know why I liked novels about the late Ming Dynasty before, but later I realized that I didn't like novels about any particular dynasty, but about novels about colonial expansion. . . . . . . . . .
The author used to have two million copies, and he hopes this book will have three million copies.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(4)Scraped 6d ago
Did the author have an accident or a pigeon?
You can't become Li Dingguo, Li Guo, Li Laiheng, Sun Chuanting, Li Zijing in the last book, and Li Zijing in this one.
. . . . .
I didn't know why I liked novels about the late Ming Dynasty before, but later I realized that I didn't like novels about any particular dynasty, but about novels about colonial expansion. . . . . . . . . .
The author used to have two million copies, and he hopes this book will have three million copies.









