The novel Ghosts Know What I Experienced- the master died when the male lead was a little boy. The male lead idolized…
that was the best part- he's immensely loyal and defends his master to the end. The master shows up later in the book as a ghost and says to the ML "you're too good for this world", then tells the masters from the other sects "I ain't paying my gambling debts", then he bounces out to the afterlife. Luckily the ML is such a good ghost hunter that all the other sects respect him and leave him alone. Ahhh, now I want to re-read this.
I read somewhere that the concept of master-disciple relationship is becoming too common, like there are too many…
The novel Ghosts Know What I Experienced- the master died when the male lead was a little boy. The male lead idolized the master and as the book progresses you start to realize the master was actually a drunken fool who gambled and womanized and pretty much drove his sect into the ground. The only reason the male lead has good cultivation is because he's completely self-taught as he grew up alone in the sect's library. I thought it was a fun twist on the master/student trope.
Ok so....there's a good news ( at least for me)...!Lie to love starts today! and Luoyang starts airing tomorrow!!!!!!!!!!!
Loving Luoyang it reminds me of Longest Day in Chang'An in that it has tons of action and no filler. And they spent the money y'all, it looks like a movie!
I made it through the first ep (and wrote a synopsis for it) but that was all I could handle. It hurt pretty bad.
I sat thru "Time Flies and You Are Here" with him and I built up a tolerance- like when a character in a drama eats poison all the time so they build up an immunity. But hey, you only have 20 eps to go- good luck!