What is faith? What is loyalty? What is power? What is justice?
Where hell is denied, hell resides. Everyone will fall, and no one will be spared.
A reborn young master, Confucius is in his prime, Yanzi is old and frail, Sun Tzu's military treatise is unfinished, and the powerful state of Jin is on the verge of collapse due to the infighting among the ministers... As a son, his courage surpasses all others. One day, he avenges his father, and the world is shaken—this is enough for a true man.
At this moment, I gaze upon the lush reeds, wondering where my beloved is amidst the autumn waters. In the mulberry grove by the city corner, a quiet maiden hesitates, while the ospreys cry. A gentleman seeks her out—what more could a good man ask for?
In this era of great contention, when the world is vying for supremacy, and Qing Ji is still alive, what will become of the world?
What if one day, every spacecraft in outer space around Earth—whether it's China's Changgong Space Station or the US SpaceLink satellite constellation—were destroyed, their debris forever circling the Earth, like the gnarled rope tightly wrapped around a prisoner's neck on a gallows? Would you still be able to breathe? Could you escape unscathed? Could such a scenario ever happen? If it did, would it be a blessing or a curse? Would you choose to be imprisoned in the heavens, or break free? Waiting online, it's urgent.
The ancients determined the seasons based on the direction pointed by the Big Dipper. Today, we have a new Big Dipper, spanning the skies above us, becoming our "eye in the sky," safeguarding national security and serving society and the people's well-being. This is the BeiDou satellite navigation system, independently developed and built by my country. The novel depicts the arduous and magnificent construction process and the growth of each individual along the way. Like the Big Dipper, they shine like a starry sky.
At the end of the Great Xin Dynasty, famine and war ravaged the land. Western cultivators and Japanese samurai, armed with firearms and iron ships, formed a coalition to wreak havoc. At the confluence of nine rivers, a gateway to all nations, people from all walks of life coexisted, where rules superseded the law. In this chaotic end of the dynasty, Qin Geng awakened the "Book of a Hundred Trades," starting as a rickshaw puller in Tianjin, working his way up to martial arts godhood. As a rickshaw puller, he circumnavigated the entire city, unlocking "Divine Speed," granting him boundless stamina and the ability to travel a thousand miles a day. As a paper crafter, he painted dragons and attracted butterflies, unlocking "Six Paths of Skin Painting," allowing him to don the skins of others and secretly learn martial arts. As a healer, he could diagnose life and death with just three fingers, unlocking "Heavenly Herbs," capable of healing all things and poisoning even true dragons. He also practiced shamanic arts ("Invoking the Gods"), tomb raiding ("Searching for Dragons and Dividing Gold"), feng shui ("Divine Strategies"), and martial arts ("Dragon and Tiger Clash"). Qin Geng mastered all the professions, took control of the shipping guild, and fought...
Traveling back to the Northern Song Dynasty, he became Wu Song, and from then on he unfolded a magnificent fairy tale landscape.
One hundred and eight demons reincarnated and caused chaos;
The spirit of the true dragon is torn apart, and the Song and Yuan Dynasties are fighting;
The Xianmen and the Hiddenmen appeared one after another to control the court;
Confucianism, Taoism, Law, and Buddhism are all yin and yang, and a hundred schools of thought contend:
Taoist priests who guard the dragon veins, demons who escape from control, monks who guard the destiny of the country, warlocks who kill invisible people, low-level sects, secret successors who control machine beasts, Meng Yuan warships sailing into the sea...
A different world of immortals and heroes...