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Hoarse

Hoarse

Literature

Li Yuansheng

20K0

"Husky" is the latest collection of poems by Lu Xun Literature Award-winning poet Li Yuansheng. It is a selection of three short collections of poems written by Li Yuansheng between 2015 and the end of 2017: "Flowers in Destiny", "The Year of Forgetting Machines" and "Husky". Each of them is a masterpiece personally selected by Li Yuansheng. It is a brand new stage in Li Yuansheng's poetry writing, and it is also the peak and intensive period of his personal writing. Many of his works have been widely praised by readers. Among them, the poem "Fate Has Blooming Flowers" won the October Poetry Award, "A Lifelong Mistake" was adapted into a song by the famous singer Pinguan, and "A Night of Zen Talk" was launched on the recitation public account.

Unsure Me

Unsure Me

Literature

Li Yuansheng

29K0

"Uncertain Me" is a selection of Li Yuansheng's original poems from 2018 to the end of 2020. The poet with 20 years of fieldwork experience finally reshaped himself and his poetry in the wilderness. It can be said that this collection of poems was not written in a study, but was walked out in the mountains and valleys. As a popular poet, one of the characteristics of Li Yuansheng's works is transparency. In this collection of poems, he is more committed to using simple styles to contain deeper thoughts, and to convey the original poetic flavor he captured in the wilderness without hindrance to the hearts of readers, encouraging them to draw beauty and power from nature and history. Based on readers' suggestions, this poetry collection also includes the poet's articles on three important topics: personal reading, poetry writing in the cloud era, and the relationship between wilderness and poetry.

Cross Your Own Seabed

Li Yuansheng

21K0

A collection of new poems by Li Yuansheng, the lyricist of Cheng Bi's "I Want to Waste Time with You" and Liu Sen's "Return to the Mountain". It collects 128 recent works by Li Yuansheng, winner of the Lu Xun Literature Prize, most of which have never been published. His poems have been read spontaneously by thousands of bloggers and nearly a hundred film and television singers, and have been read over 100 million times online. His poems are born from nature, from daily life, and from himself. They use the bricks and tiles of words to build a secret camp of the soul. He has been walking in the wilderness, and the wind that carries the breath of rocks, mountain springs and butterflies comes out of his writings, soothing all the hard-working hearts and eyes. "I can't think of anything better than this. The new spring is here. I'm still here, and so are you."