It's on the shelves, and according to the usual practice, people say a few words like dogs

It's going to be on the shelves tomorrow, thank you for watching me all the way here.

From "Reckless" to "Unforgivable Sin", I have changed, and the biggest change is the amplification of desire. That's not a good thing.

I'm afraid that my old book friends will be disappointed, that they will be said that they "haven't grown", and that they won't be able to support themselves by code words alone.

I am afraid that I will lose my original intention in this process of gains and losses, and my face will be hateful. I want too much, so I'm honestly afraid.

I started paying more attention to the data than ever before, paying attention to the reviews, and the slightest fluctuation in my collection could keep me up at night.

To make you laugh, I'm such a cautious, scaring person, and always cranky when I'm fine.

About four days ago, when I revised the beginning for the last time, I figured out some of the problems and gradually adjusted my mentality.

Codewords are a lonely process of internal vision, and you have to peek into your heart repeatedly and constantly talk to yourself - isn't it a bit like the person who goes crazy in martial arts novels?

Fortunately, with you, my readers, communicating with you, I was able to identify these problems in time. On the surface, I may not be able to see it, but perhaps only I can feel how important you are to me.

When I hated myself, you were still there for me, watching me clumsily fall and get up, spinning in place, waiting for me to correct one problem after another.

Ordinary as me, it is really an honor to be treated so gently by you, thank you! Thank you! Thank you!

I would also like to thank my editor Ziliang for tirelessly giving advice, discussing, and helping me review the manuscript again and again...... I think that if I had swapped identities, I was an editor, and I would have flipped the table long ago when I encountered such a stupid and stubborn author. Thank you Ziliang very much!

Regarding "Unforgivable Sin", in line with the principle of getting up where you fall, I set an unconventional, brain-burning and exciting main line for it, and I plan to spend a lot of ink on the main story.

The side case is closer to the original reasoning than the previous work "Reckless", which is what I have always loved. In the online article, its only advantage is that it is close to the truth, but in the market environment where the fingers are flying all over the sky, the temptation of the real trait is really limited.

The disadvantage is obvious, slow heating, and the requirements for pen power and logic are super high, not only to write some boring key details of the case, but also interesting, not like the old-school Benge mystery novels, zoomed in on the scene description. Fortunately, when racking my brains to overcome one difficulty after another, I can occasionally feel that I have made a small progress, but I hope those are not illusions.

There's nothing else to say, it's going to be on the shelves tomorrow.

I'm responsible for coding words, quality and quantity, and the rest, please leave it to you.