Tai Sui

Tai Sui
Tai Su



The summary is short, but you realize how accurate it is when you get to the novel's end. Tai Sui is my favorite xianxia novel I've ever read. I am also ugly sobbing after finishing the last few chapters. Priest outdid herself this time.

Reading this fiction was like moving through a lifelong journey.  The plots were quite severe and heavy, but luckily the main protagonist's character was very naughty, providing comic relief.

The novel focuses on more than just the main protagonist, Xi Ping. There were many essential side characters, each with their own back story told in detail and impressive character development as the story grows. So even though there was no CP, you can enjoy the close relationship between those characters because Priest is very good at playing with emotions.

Tai Sui was so melancholy, not because of any singular event that occurred to any character but just the fundamental idea of toil for life and survival under an obscure universe, the seeking of substance, and the constant ticking of time that persists despite the rise and ruin of life, demise, and the entire notion of the world.

If you like Modu (Silent Reading), you will like Tai Sui because it has a similar 'everything connected to each other' spiderweb vibe.

Latest chapter: COMPLETE

Download Tai Su eBook

book 1: Drawing Spiritual Energy

book 2: Forming the Heart

book 3: Passing Through Tribulation

book 4: Overturning the Mountains

book 5: Travelers' Welcome

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