Liu Zhenyun, Han nationality, a native of Henan Province, graduated from the Chinese Department of Peking University and is a professor at the College of Literature of China Renmin University. He has written many novels, such as Yellow Flower in My Hometown, Getting along with My Hometown, Noodles and Flowers in My Hometown (four volumes), Nonsense, My name is Liu Yuejin, One sentence is worth 10,000 sentences, I am not Pan Jinlian, and Children in the Age of Eating Melons. Tapp, Xin Binglian, Unit, Chicken Feather in One Place, 1942, Looking Back on the Past, and other short stories.
One sentence is worth 10,000 sentences, which is divided into two parts: The Book of Chu Yan and The Book of Yan Hui. The first part of Going Out tells the story of a lonely and helpless farmer, Moses Wu, who lost his only adopted daughter on the way to find his wife who eloped with others. In order to find her, he had to go to Yanjin. The second half of Back tells the story that Niu, the son of MoMo Wu's adopted daughter Qiaoling, also went to find a wife who eloped with others.
Yidi chicken feather
A Piece of Chicken Feather is a novella by Liu Zhenyun, a contemporary writer in China. It was first published in NovelistNo. 199 1. A Chicken Feather describes the mediocre, trivial and embarrassing life of a small clerk in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Liu Zhenyun used his quiet humor to truly express the lives of little people. In ordinary life, there are humble pleasures and hidden social crises, which form the interweaving of comedy and tragedy.
Kobayashi and his wife are both foreigners, and they stayed in Beijing to work after graduating from college. After they have children and a house, their troubles are getting more and more. The novel shows the ordinary life of ordinary people in plain language. It tells the story of Xiaolin queuing to buy tofu, quarreling with his wife, her job being transferred, letting her children go to kindergarten, queuing to buy Chinese cabbage, pulling honeycomb briquettes, eating and sleeping at work every day. There are no flowery words from beginning to end, but they all reflect the truth of daily life.