Unlike the random 4-5 Stars that just seem to love giving every bland cultivation novel a ticket into the top of the voting pool.Ill tell you what this is in a few words;Wuxia Cliche Filled GarbageWant to atleast get SOME enjoyment?;Skip first 3 Chapters, stop reading at Chapter 12.
It's super cliche like almost all other books, but the delivery is well done. The protagonist's cultivation does it explode to ridiculous levels (He is still too powerful for his level) instead he focuses on random stuff.
Super slow pacing that is actually a little annoying, when she gets to the shadow realm she basically stay in a cave cooking for 5 chapters.. MC seems to lack character development and the story barely moved on, I dont see any development in 50 chapter, seems like you are trying to drag things out because those 50 chapters could easily have been 20 since there is basically nothing in it, neither introduction, plot development, or character development.. Well I guess there is barely a little of friendship and such..
He makes a stance and his sword is glowing with a weak blue light, he run and jump forward to cut the goblin hand and the wooden spear is falling to the ground, he didn't stop his jump and passing the goblin side and stab his sword into the goblin's stomach from its back. Matthew released his arrow and it hit the goblin's shoulder on the right side, the goblin is flinching and James slash his sword from the side and it makes the upper body of the goblin flying to the side while it's lower body falling to the ground.
Sebuah ruangan berukuran sedang. Ruangan yang disangkanya berisikan berbagai peralatan untuk bernyanyi, tapi kenyataannya, ruangan itu terlihat kosong. Yang ada dihadapannya hanya tiga orang pria. Tiga orang pria yang tidak ia kenal. Matanya terus menelusuri keberadaan Eunna, tapi gadis itu tetap tak terlihat.
This masquerading that book publishers partake of is aggravating for a few reasons. It assumes that size matters and readers won't buy books that are not novels. This assumption leads to all sorts of smoke-and-mirrors tactics with font, point size, leading, and white space -- as publishers strive for that seemingly all-important 200-page length. They will also include unwanted introductory material and criticism; or they will publish several shorter pieces together. Meanwhile, publishers will compress long novels (especially classic novels) into as little paper as possible. Therefore, at a glance it will appear that Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre and its 1966 prequel Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys are more or less the same length. I understand that publishers are not capricious in their marketing strategies and that these practices are based on researching market trends, but it is still an aggravation for book lovers and would-be book buyers.
Popular Reviews