
In a remote village of Zhejiang, the art of Chinese opera is not just a profession but a way of life. Generations of families raise children to become female dan—stage actresses whose voices and movements are honed from the womb. Here, a strict code of “three allowances” governs every encounter: one may be admired but not taken, praised but not promised, and schemed with but never granted. This unspoken contract shapes the delicate balance between performance and reality, turning the stage into a mirror for both desire and restraint.
Against this backdrop rises Liu Miao‑gu, a strikingly beautiful and razor‑sharp performer whose talent lets her glide between male and female roles with effortless grace. Though celebrated for her captivating presence, she must constantly negotiate the thin line between illusion and authenticity, aware that every smile may hide a hidden bargain. As her reputation spreads, the village watches to see whether she can master the art of living as much as the art of acting.
Language
zh
Duration
~3 hours (196K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2008-05-20
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Known by a pen name rather than a documented personal identity, this Qing-era novelist is remembered for Shen Lou Zhi, a work set in the world of Guangzhou's merchant elite. The mystery around the writer adds another layer of interest to a rare surviving voice from 18th-century Chinese fiction.
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