
This Monkey is Too Stubborn
About This Novel
Chen Wu Nian traveled to the world before Journey to the West and became a small Qi practitioner in the Three Stars Cave under the Bodhi Seat. Demons are rampant these days, Buddhism is poaching, and human lives are like grass. Chen Wu Nian has a great dream: to live until old age and death. (Quietly, it would be better if you could live forever) Until that day, the master brought a little monkey and got involved with him. In order to prevent this little monkey from involving himself, Chen Wu Nian decided to teach him the method of stability. From then on, Sun Wukong embarked on a completely different path. And Chen Wu Nian also found that the world of Journey to the West seemed a little different from the one in his memory. The secrets of the four continents, the sacred trees rising into the sky, the turbulent seabed, and the inactive heaven, everything is waiting for people to change. ... Golden-winged Dapeng: "I want to become a brother with him, but Sun Wukong can't take a step out of the cave!" King of Hell: "I tied him to the underworld and put the book of life and death in front of his eyes! But Sun Wukong didn't even look at it, he summoned a substitute and ran away!" Dragon King: "I inserted the Sea-Dinging Needle at the door of his cave, but he didn't take it!" The plan to travel to the west was thwarted, and Buddha was very troubled. What happens? Why is this monkey like this?
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(19)Scraped 6d ago
Let's build a suite of buildings
Build a supporting building. If you have any names that you want to be included in the book, please tell me. The name is so hard to come up with! !
This protagonist has nothing to do with Gou
After reading the first few chapters, I felt that Pig Knuckle was always doing superfluous things. After reading about 10 chapters, the phrase "suspiciousness breeds hidden ghosts" appeared in my mind. Seeing that Pig's Feet was able to hide what he had done from Master Bodhi, it felt like he had no self-awareness.
Selling dog meat on a sheep's head, the full text is off track, and it only has a penny relationship with Journey to the West, and the rest is just water.
This book is selling itself as dog meat. I don't know whether the author wants to improve the number of words or just doesn't know how to write. Instead, he writes other articles with the emphasis on Journey to the West. It's hard to beat the eight-part book if it's not eight.
I found it interesting after reading the introduction. This book is worth reading. When I looked at the content, it was very different from my psychological expectations.
It's so rubbish. The clone of a dignified saint will not know what you are thinking or your level of cultivation. You are so contented that you can hide it. You can know what a monkey is thinking. People don't know what you are thinking. You are afraid that you don't know what a saint is. You treat others as mortals. You are drunk. In the ancient world, if you have a big fist, you are a master. There is no use in dealing with those empty things. It's a matter of a little finger. Whose IQ is being insulted? It's simply a brainless article.
The subject matter is novel, the concept is clever, and the plot is full of ups and downs. It is worth recalling.
Yo! This introduction is too different from a woman's makeup look, right?
I said it would be better if it was 1/10 with an introduction, and I agreed.
It's off topic, right?
I feel like this fairy novel has nothing to do with Journey to the West at all.
Right, right, right
Very good, I like it. Hahahahaha
Explain
The world view of this book is roughly a combination of Journey to the West and some of my ideas. There are some differences from the mainstream system in some places.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(19)Scraped 6d ago
Let's build a suite of buildings
Build a supporting building. If you have any names that you want to be included in the book, please tell me. The name is so hard to come up with! !
This protagonist has nothing to do with Gou
After reading the first few chapters, I felt that Pig Knuckle was always doing superfluous things. After reading about 10 chapters, the phrase "suspiciousness breeds hidden ghosts" appeared in my mind. Seeing that Pig's Feet was able to hide what he had done from Master Bodhi, it felt like he had no self-awareness.
Selling dog meat on a sheep's head, the full text is off track, and it only has a penny relationship with Journey to the West, and the rest is just water.
This book is selling itself as dog meat. I don't know whether the author wants to improve the number of words or just doesn't know how to write. Instead, he writes other articles with the emphasis on Journey to the West. It's hard to beat the eight-part book if it's not eight.
I found it interesting after reading the introduction. This book is worth reading. When I looked at the content, it was very different from my psychological expectations.
It's so rubbish. The clone of a dignified saint will not know what you are thinking or your level of cultivation. You are so contented that you can hide it. You can know what a monkey is thinking. People don't know what you are thinking. You are afraid that you don't know what a saint is. You treat others as mortals. You are drunk. In the ancient world, if you have a big fist, you are a master. There is no use in dealing with those empty things. It's a matter of a little finger. Whose IQ is being insulted? It's simply a brainless article.
The subject matter is novel, the concept is clever, and the plot is full of ups and downs. It is worth recalling.
Yo! This introduction is too different from a woman's makeup look, right?
I said it would be better if it was 1/10 with an introduction, and I agreed.
It's off topic, right?
I feel like this fairy novel has nothing to do with Journey to the West at all.
Right, right, right
Very good, I like it. Hahahahaha
Explain
The world view of this book is roughly a combination of Journey to the West and some of my ideas. There are some differences from the mainstream system in some places.













