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805 The Legend of Wukong

In Luoyang's previous life, he also dabbled in several online entertainment articles.

Most of this type of online articles tell the story of the protagonist traveling to a plane with a completely different culture and earth, and then relying on various knowledge of the earth to destroy gods and kill Buddhas in another world. It is so yy-like. The most unified part is that the protagonist of each book copied Jin Hezai's "The Legend of Wukong". If you think about it carefully, the reason is actually very simple, because "The Legend of Wukong" itself is not long, but the content is enough to be surprising, and it also has a certain level of style. It is related to Journey to the West, so it is just right to copy it.

Luoyang also thinks so.

So the brain circuit structure of time travelers is always surprisingly similar...

Jin Hezai's "Biography of Wukong" has a total of twelve chapters, with a length of about 100,000 words, which belongs to the category of novellas. The book tells the struggle between the tragic hero Sun Wukong and Tang Seng and others against fate. The author reinterprets certain plots of "Journey to the West" from the perspective of modern people. The whole article is filled with the words "thinking". When it was released for two thousand years, it directly caused a reading craze among netizens across the country, and in the following years it achieved a series of rare and huge honors.

A considerable number of people even directly regard "The Legend of Wukong" as the first book on the Internet!

At the same time, this book has been adapted into comics and movies, and a series of peripheral developments have also been quite smooth.

As a derivative work on Journey to the West, the charm of "The Legend of Wukong" can be seen. In fact, Luoyang has also seen countless works interpreting Journey to the West in his previous life, and the most impressive works of Luoyang also include the famous "The Legend of Wukong". He also recommended this work to many friends. However, because those friends in his previous life recommended "The Legend of Wukong" by Luoyang, they no longer trust Luoyang very much.

"Don't die, and don't live alone."

"What's the point of giving birth to me? You can't laugh. What's the point of destroying me? You won't reduce your arrogance."

"Does any direction be chosen and will swim to the same fate?"

"Ruotian suppresses me, splits the day, Ruodi holds me, and breaks the ground. I am born free, who dares to be above me!"

"I want this heaven to be unable to cover my eyes, this earth to be unable to bury my heart, this sentient beings to understand my intentions, and that all the Buddhas will disappear!"

"Maybe when everyone is born, they will think that the world exists for him alone. When he finds out that he is wrong, he begins to grow up..."

"I have a dream. I think when I fly up, I will make way out that day. When I enter the sea, the water is divided into two sides. The gods and immortals, seeing that I am also called brothers, carefree, there is no longer anything to restrain me, no one to care about me, no place to reach me, no things that I cannot do, no things that I cannot defeat, no things that I cannot defeat."

Interestingly...

Many classic sentences circulated in major chicken soup articles and countless fantasy online articles in the past life, but in fact many of them come from this "Biography of Wukong".

If the interpretation of the second brother Yang Jian in "The End of Life and the Water of the Longest East" is profound, then the interpretation of a series of characters in "The Legend of Wukong" is shocking!

It is more appropriate to use this work as the sequel to "The End of Sorrow in Life" after all. After all, the connection between Journey to the West and the Conquest of the Gods is undeniable. Moreover, Luoyang believes that the popularity of "The Legend of Wukong" will definitely be more intense than that of "The End of Sorrow in Life" because of the meagerity of today, short stories themselves are easier to exert than long stories.

After making sure to pay attention, Luoyang began to write.

...

[The four people walked here, and there was a dense forest in front of them, and there was no road again.

"Wukong, I'm hungry, I'm looking for some food." Tang Seng sat down on the stone and said.

"I'm busy, don't you go to find it yourself?...It's not that you don't have legs." Sun Wukong said with a stick on his back.

"Are you busy? What are you busy with?"

"Don't you think this sunset is beautiful?" said Sun Wukong, looking at the horizon, "Only by looking at this can I insist on walking west every day."

"You can look while looking, as long as you don't hit the big tree."

"I don't do anything when I look at the sunset!"

"Sun Wukong, you can't do this, you can't bully the bald man like this. If you starve him to death, we will not be able to find the West Heaven. If we can't find the West Heaven, the curse on us will never be lifted." Zhu Bajie said.]

...

At first glance, "The Legend of Wukong" seems to be full of spoofs.

The same was true in Luoyang in his previous life, but as the plot gradually deepened, his thoughts gradually changed.

This seemingly spoof writing style just sets off the tragic progress of the story. Looking back at the careless language, there will even be a sense of sadness.

In addition, in terms of writing techniques, "The Legend of Wukong" is also extremely clever. Its story does not advance according to the single narrative model in "Journey to the West", but it is divided into three clues: one is the unrequited love between Zhu Bajie and A Yue, the second is the passionate but depressing relationship between Sun Wukong and Zixia, and the third is the sorrowful love between Tang Monk and Xiaobailong. The story continues to change between Zhu Bajie, Sun Wukong and Tang Monk. Each chapter seems to be independent, but they are spliced ​​together to form a complete story.

My thoughts paused, and Luoyang continued to write.

He was very fast, because the plot had already been rumbling in his mind thousands of times, so he achieved the effect of writing like a god when he tapped the keyboard. It took almost less than half an hour to finish the first chapter of "The Legend of Wukong".

"Do you want to serialize?"

After thinking a little, Luoyang gave up this idea.

Compared with the work "The Legend of Wukong", watching the serialization intermittently will undoubtedly greatly reduce its charm. This work requires readers to read it in one go before they can understand the profound thoughts expressed in the story and feel the inner unwillingness and resistance of the characters. This is the same as "First Intimate Contact". If you read it intermittently, it is likely that the atmosphere created by the whole book will disappear.

Moreover, there are only twelve chapters in "The Legend of Wukong" and there is no need to be serialized.

Instead of slow serialization, it is better to write the full text of "The Legend of Wukong" in one breath. Luoyang is very confident in his speed. Although "The Legend of Wukong" has about 100,000 words, two days is enough for Luoyang to complete it.

A crazy code of 50,000 words per day?

Some big touches with fast enough hand speed in the previous life can achieve it.

It is obvious that Luoyang has such a big touch, so soon there was only the sound of typing on the keyboard in Luoyang's study. As for the trouble that Liu Qin had brought to him before, it was also selected by Luoyang. I have to say that typing is a very suitable thing to divert attention...
Chapter completed!
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