The encyclopedia project can’t be handled right now.
Ye Muyu’s new book, therefore, will focus on silk products to tell a story.
For a story to be appealing, it must be lodramatic.
In the new book "Silk," the main characters are a male and female pair of cousins who, after the family’s decline and the death of their parents, each inherit a family shop.
But the male cousin believes that, as a man, the female cousin should hand over her shop to him to allow him to expand the business under the pretext of family developnt.
This female cousin is inherently independent and has a knack for comrce; the family’s business was left to her by her parents, and she wouldn’t willingly give it to her cousin. Besides, she’s planning to marry and have children with her surna, particularly as she’s discovered her silk products are becoming outdated and need improvent by incorporating other advantages.
Dedicated to family developnt, she approaches her male cousin multiple tis to explain, but he remains unwilling.
Moreover, this male cousin grows exasperated with her persistence and outright hires thugs to kill her, intending to eliminate her.
Unexpectedly, at a critical mont, the female cousin pulls him down with her, and both end up severely injured.
They narrowly escaped being wiped out by their competitor’s family.
After barely surviving, their souls swap.
The female cousin entered the male cousin’s body, and the male cousin entered the female cousin’s body, exchanging genders.
Following their initial shock, the female cousin starts gradually expanding the family’s assets, while the male cousin, due to his female identity, faces nurous obstacles and experiences firsthand the hardships of being a woman.
Especially when the female cousin sarcastically repeats the male cousin’s previous remarks like "You, a woman..." during each encounter, making the male cousin’s mood even more stifled.
Not to ntion he’s also subject to lessons about female virtues from the family’s elders.
This novel carries a strong satirical tone; Ye Muyu realizes that attempting to elevate won’s status won’t necessarily succeed solely by her efforts. The crux lies not in n’s resistance; rather, most won are raised from birth with the education to support husbands and teach children.
What matters most to them is how many children they can bear for their husbands, and when Ye Muyu’s novel is published, it will likely face resistance from many, with only a minority experiencing liberation.
Given this foresight, Ye Muyu’s intention is not rely wishful thinking—expecting won to rise solely because of one book.
Instead, she focuses on writing about silk manufacturing and similar topics.
anwhile, the Emperor has already arranged for people to go south to collect cotton and build factories.
Ye Muyu, naturally, won’t miss this opportunity to profit and gain fa.
Gaining fa is for self-protection.
Earning money, obviously, is to improve quality of life; no one would complain about having too much money.
Once this novel is released, it might provide job opportunities for so won.
After all, silk products are an area won excel in, unlike the traditional industries in Great Chu, which are predominantly male-focused.
Ultimately, those who are strong can rise—without ability, societal norms can’t be altered even if perceptions change.
Ye Muyu chooses a gradual approach.
The bookstore’s business is thriving, and Ye Muyu is now not particularly lacking in money.
Ever since the phonetic books sold like hotcakes in the County City and Prefectural City near the capital, the news spread, and people have proactively approached Yonghe for business discussions.
Steward Luo’s progress has been exceptionally swift; in less than a month, he’s already expanded Yonghe Bookstore to cover half of Great Chu’s territory.
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