Chapter 436: Extra Author's Nonsense
Thank you all for your company along the way. It has been serialized for more than 7 months from December last year to July this year, and now it is finished.
Black Bandit Mountain was located in Xunzhou, in present-day Guangxi. I've only been to Guangxi twice, but I remember the fruit and seafood being delicious, and the mountains and rivers being beautiful.
However, I have never been to Xunzhou. I just saw the name on a historical map and thought it sounded nice, so I used it. Many of the descriptions of the local area in this article are based on my impressions during the trip and research, so they may differ slightly from the actual situation.
Moreover, the background is fictional after all, and there may be some unrealistic and fanciful parts in the article. Please do not delve into it too deeply.
I am very engaged when I write. I often sit alone in front of the computer and write, and suddenly I laugh or start crying.
Well, I'm just nervous.
Every time I write a book, I use several large packs of tissues. When I first started writing, I figured I had to earn enough to cover my electricity bill and tissue money (thanks again to the readers for their tips).
Later, I saw some readers commenting that they also cried and laughed while reading the book, and I felt relieved (dog head smile.jpg)
Thank you to the readers who took the trouble to help me find bugs in the article.
Posting is really weird, like turning in a test paper as a kid. I checked it over and thought it was fine, but then I turned it in and realized it was wrong here and there.
I saw many readers commenting and arguing about Zhizhi’s future plans in the main text.
I was actually quite conflicted about this question when I was writing.
Writing a protagonist from a child to an adult can easily lead to character breakdown. As a character grows up, they will inevitably change, and different people have different expectations for a child's future.
When I wrote about Zhizhi from the age of ten to thirteen, I grabbed my hair and wrote and deleted, deleted and wrote again, imagining what Zhizhi's adolescence would be like, imagining her reaction when she saw her biological mother's notes, and imagining her courage to put on armor and go into battle.
As for whether or not to become emperor, well, that’s even more difficult.
In Zhizhi's eyes, no one is nobler than anyone else.
This is also one of the places where she forms a sharp contrast with Murong Wan.
Murong Wan has a strong class consciousness and she secretly hopes to move up (although there is no way to do so) and cannot accept falling in class.
In her eyes, people outside the aristocracy were incomparable to her. A slave was a slave, and a master was a master. The oppressed class was born to serve the ruling class.
The exiled Pei Lingyun, the bullied Xiao Di in the palace, and Xue Che who grew up with him also have class consciousness, but they have benevolence and righteousness in their hearts and hope that ordinary people can live and work in peace and contentment.
But Zhizhi didn't have this awareness. She had a latent modern spirit. In her eyes, the nobles, bureaucrats, landlords and common people in the feudal dynasty were all the same.
She knew that there were nobles in the palace and in the court, but she felt in her heart that those people were no different and if they were not good enough, they could be replaced.
She went to war and overthrew the old dynasty not to achieve class advancement, but simply for revenge and to drive out foreign enemies and protect her homeland.
During the first few years in the capital, she knew her aristocratic status, but she was willing to be a merchant's daughter in Heishan Mansion and never thought of returning to the palace to recognize her biological father and become a princess.
I believe she has great abilities, but with my current writing skills, it is difficult for her to smoothly undergo a transformation in consciousness, and I might fail miserably.
Since I can't write it coherently and can't overcome the contradictions in my heart, I might as well stop worrying about it and just go with an open ending.
Therefore, in the main text, the future of Zhizhi is open.
I believe that Zhizhi will be able to choose the right path for herself after more experience, and most importantly, no matter what she chooses, she has the ability to make herself happy.
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Portraits of young people are very popular, beautiful and passionate, but not only young people are passionate.
When I read books in the past, I was always impressed by many older characters. They were young once, and even in their old age, they are still full of vigor and vitality, and they deserve a place in the group portrait.
Youth grows old easily, but passion fades hard.
For example, there is a person named Muxiangtai. He is not young but has not achieved much. He is still writing blindly based on his passion.
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