Library

Browse and search novels

2 novels found

Marriage is Exciting: the Cute Little Wife is Too Hot

Tao Ling

636K0

Unwilling to be abandoned, Si Qin became a substitute and married a man she had only met twice! After getting married, I found out that he was actually the uncle of a scumbag. He is deeply sinister and clearly aware of their relationship. "You know clearly that I am your nephew's fiancee, why do you still want to marry me?" He raised his eyelids slightly and stared at her intently, "Because there is no other woman in the world who is more like her." Well, since she is a substitute, she made a three-part agreement with him: no kissing, no touching, and no doing that after marriage! He was dissatisfied, "Then why should I marry you?" "I'm just a substitute. I'm just there for you to look at and miss your sweetheart." His eyes darkened. One night, in the darkness of the night, a certain woman was so eaten and wiped that she could not get out of bed. What about the 'Three Chapters of Agreement' agreed upon?

Chuanjiang Museum

Tao Ling

124K0

This book consists of dozens of prose works written by the author in recent years, and is one of the works in the "Hundred Flowers·Chinese Nature Writing" series. This book runs through a lively and flexible "natural history" style, and the collected works are divided into parts such as water, navigation, and shore. However, it avoids the simple classification by subject matter of general thematic essay collections and the rigid and homogeneous writing style of reference book entries. The author extensively collects rare historical materials, uses humorous and vivid language, and uses the customs and folklore of the Sichuan River Basin to recreate the beautiful ecology created by an ancient river. What this river carries and embodies is not only the large number and variety of swimming fish in the water, not only the simple, strong, courageous and optimistic boat trackers on the bow and shore, but also an ancient and magnificent scenery that has gradually moved away from human beings living by the water and fighting against the dangers of the beach. These intricate stories of fiction and reality, of sorrow and joy, are just like the world-famous Sichuan River trumpet. After the writer's explanation and retelling, they break through the miasma of time and re-explode on the turbulent waves of the Sichuan River and swirl around the winding mountains of the Shu Road.