The end of the volume and the book

At this point, the second volume of the book, King Arthur who lived in Scotland Yard, is officially over.

Looking back at the word count in the second volume, to be honest, it was quite a bit more than expected.

Part of the reason is that the writing state fluctuates over a period of time due to physical factors, so it seems to be procrastinating in the processing of some plots, and the rhythm of some plots is not well grasped.

Part of the reason is that I want to restore the British social ecology around the 1830s as much as possible, whether it is political economy, market life or urban appearance, as long as it is within my personal ability, I will try to mention it.

However, due to the plot arrangement, there are also some places in the book that cannot be done in terms of some social and historical backgrounds. If you are interested in this area and want to continue to understand this era in depth, you can refer to the list of reference books posted at the end of the chapter.

However, although there were ups and downs in the writing of the second volume, fortunately, regardless of the ebb and flow, the end of the second volume still ended according to the original plan, and it can be regarded as living up to the support and expectations of readers and friends, and living up to the title of the volume "King Arthur Living in Scotland Yard".

In the next third volume, Arthur will leave the police sequence of Scotland Yard and take on a new responsibility to join the unfamiliar British diplomatic system, and he will also briefly leave the British Isles, which he has not left since his rebirth, and travel through the vast expanse of Europa as a lowly social official.

To France, to Germany, to Russia, wherever he wanted, he would travel through all the mountains, rivers and lands centered on the Kingdom of Hanover.

He will meet many new friends, encounter many new events, and wait quietly in the sunny land for the day of his judgment, the day that will come.

He will return to Britain in the near future.

Return to the heavy rain in London, to the fog over the River Thames, to the shadows beneath the walls of the Houses of Parliament, Whitehall Street and the City of Merit.

Well, having said so many testimonials and impressions, it's time to recommend the must-read list for the starting point. Here, I would like to introduce a new book to you.

The new book "Who is reborn to take the civil service exam", which is scheduled to be put on the shelves on April 1, has been fattened and can be slaughtered at any time.

April 1st is April Fool's Day, but I'm not kidding you.

Lao Liu's creative level, I don't need to go through more words and tongues to introduce it here, readers who have read Lao Liu's famous work "I Really Don't Want to Be Reborn" know how high Lao Liu's level is, about three or four stories high.

Readers who like urban literature and rebirth literature can take a look, and it is difficult to find a better new urban book than Lao Liu.

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Main Bibliography:

[1] Yan Zhaoxiang, History of the British Aristocracy

[2] Yan Zhaoxiang, History of the British Political System

[3] Benedet Croce, A History of Europe in the 19th Century

[4] Pei Yaqin, "Whigism and the Constitutional Tradition in 17th-19th Century England"

[5] Gong Xiangrui, "British Administrative Institutions and Civil Service"

[6] Lacey Smith, A Professor's History of Britain

[7] Clarissa Dixon Wright, A History of British Food

[8] Wang Zhanghui, British Economic History

[9] Adolf Brenneck, Old Britain: Experiences of 19th-Century Britain

[10] Philip Stead, Vidocq, the Father of the World Detective

[11] Anna Beauquel, A History of the Gentleness of the French Literati

[12] Charles Aumann, Duke of Wellington: Arthur Wellesley's Army (1809-1814)

[13] Louis Girard, Napoleon III

[14] Neil Ferguson, The Rothschilds: The Prophet of Money

[15] Puglia Satya, "Gun Empire: The Violent Making of the Industrial Revolution"

[16] Ruth Goodman, "Becoming a Victorian"

[17] Lytton Strache, Victorian Times

[18] John S. D. Wright, Darkest and Peak: Victorian Britain and the World

[19] E.P. Thompson, The Making of the British Working Class

[20] Bill Wilson, "Delicious Fraud: A History of Food Fraud and Combating Counterfeiting"

……