Just wondering, are "The Girl Who Loves Italian Noodles" and "Emperor Xiao from the Falkland Islands" the same account? I've been observing them for months because you two seem to post updates and send gifts around the same time every day, haha!
There are too many babies to name them all (I'm extremely grateful to the babies whose names I didn't mention~~~).
Next, I'd like to thank the babies who left comments and interacted every day, listed in no particular order.
I would like to express my sincere gratitude to the following individuals: He Zhen Ye Yan, Ye Linxing, Ccccccsh, Shang Li Mo, Butterfly Believer, No Summer No Winter, Sister Fang Ah Ah Ah, Anonymous Certificate, Like……, FOMO~, User, annie (cannot type the following symbols), Qing Song Guo Ya, Little Antique Min, Mu Rui Heng, User, Girl Who Loves Italian Dragon Beard Noodles……
There are many more babies to come, but I won't list them all here.
Thank you everyone, thank you for your love and support.
Finally, I would like to thank those who quietly lurked, silently urged for updates, and those who gave Orange a five-star review after reading it.
Here, Orange would like to say something.
If you've read this far and followed the story all the way, could you give Orange a sweet five-star review? It would be best if you included text, otherwise it doesn't seem to count!
Ah! I really want to highlight those two sentences above~~~ I think you guys will see them, right? ? ?
Finally, here's Orange's summary.
It's like asking and answering my own question.
First: Why is relatively little space used?
Orange: Uh, because most stories with spatial elements are set up like this. To be more honest, stories with spatial elements tend to get more views. Personally, I don't really want to have one.
Second: Why did the writing become so bland later on? (I didn't originally intend to include this question because it's quite sharp, but after thinking about it, I decided to face myself directly and get back up from where I fell.)
Orange: To be honest, firstly, I didn't intend to write this long at the beginning, and secondly, the pace in the early stages was too fast, and the main character was taken offline too quickly, which made it difficult to develop the later storyline.
This is Orange's problem; her writing skills are insufficient, and she lacks writing experience. After finishing this book, Orange will reflect on it carefully and strive to improve in the next one.
Third: Is the female lead actually the original body?
Orange: Absolutely, definitely, and certainly! But it's also Orange's own fault for not writing this clearly enough at the beginning.
Babies can understand it as two parallel worlds, both before and after entering the book.
Just like at the end of the story, she transmigrated into the novel she was reading, became a character in the book, and inherited the memories and all the emotions of the characters in the book. These emotions were not only romantic love, but also familial love.
She lived inside the book for over fifty years, only to discover in the end that she had actually been a book in her previous life.
This is why her parents were different before and after she transmigrated into the book.
That's because after transmigrating into the book, the person who wrote the novel about her past life was a friend of the female protagonist's granddaughter. She had met everyone in the Huo family, including the Third Uncle and Uncle Zhong, but she had never met Shen Xiuwen or Jiang's mother. Therefore, in the world she constructed (which was the world before the female protagonist transmigrated into the book), the female protagonist's parents were not Shen Xiuwen and Jiang's mother.
As for these two books, which one comes first and which one comes later.
This question is like asking whether the chicken or the egg came first.
Or perhaps it's similar to a Möbius strip, too closely connected to the present.
Okay, I've been rambling on and on, and for some reason, I suddenly feel really upset right now.
Even though I didn't experience anything described in the article, it felt like I followed them through their entire lives.
Lastly, I wish all the readers who have read this far joy, happiness, and all the best.
Goodbye, Jiang Si—
Goodbye, Huo Yanzhou—
Goodbye to everyone I've written about—
Goodbye, my dear babies—
We'll see each other again someday, maybe next time.
(October 31, 2025, left by Orange.)
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