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.
Life of the Strongest Transmigrater is a unique take on the transmigration and cultivation genres, bringing a fresh spin to the often-trodden path of "ordinary person becomes overwhelmingly powerful." In this story, Lin Tian, the protagonist, finds himself transmigrated into a world filled with cultivation, where he's bestowed with an overpowered system that makes him invincible in every way imaginable. With the ability to refine pills at the Great Dao level, craft weapons that can defeat god-like beings, and even bend reality with his words, Lin Tian quickly becomes a figure so powerful that even the gods and demons tremble in his wake.
This is a good novel. Hope you keep it up Author.The character is smart and not dumb like other mcs.He is actually overpowered and not like those main characters in other novels where he is said to overpowered but gets knocked up or loses conciousness after every damn fight.And most importantly, he is not a fucking SIMP.
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