登陆注册
10436200000001

第1章 The New Kid

FOR ROBIN AND BLAKE WITH LOVE The Fizzy Whiz Kid

SOME PEOPLE RACE DIRT BIKES. SOME people collect snow globes. Some people build boats in a bottle. My mom's hobby is baking desserts. Man, do I love her hobby—it's so much better than boats in a bottle! My dad's hobby also happens to be his job. He's an entomologist, which is a scientist who studies bugs. I don't like his hobby as much; it's kind of weird. Actually, I have a pretty weird hobby myself. I make lists.

WHY I LIKE LISTS

1. Useful for organizing thoughts

2. Fast way to give information to others

3. Easier to read than paragraphs

I've been making lists since first grade, when I first learned how to write. Nobody knows why; it's a family mystery.

OTHER FAMILY MYSTERIES

1. Why does my mom always get the hiccups when she laughs?

2. Why is my dad the only person on the planet who loves cockroaches?

3. What is that weird smell coming from the back of the refrigerator?

4. Why do people in uniforms make my mom nervous?

5. Why does my mom care so much about manners?

6. Why do we keep moving?

The family-mystery list could go on for pages. But instead of that, here's a list about me.

FACTS ABOUT MITCHELL MATHIS

? Age twelve, sixth grade

? Average height, weight

? Pretty good student, but no Einstein

? Pets: black Labrador retriever—"Bandit"

? Favorite book: "The Jungle Book," by Rudyard Kipling

? Favorite food: fried chicken, Mom's chocolate cake

? Favorite sports: baseball, football, ice hockey

? Favorite car: yellow Lamborghini

? Favorite animal: big cats (jaguars, tigers, lions, cheetahs, etc.)

? Favorite activities: making lists, handball, skateboarding, juggling, magic, playing with Bandit, playing guitar, going to the opera (no lie!), exploring, and discovering stuff

? Biggest fear: looking like an idiot

? Best personal trait: I've got guts

FIVE THINGS THAT TAKE GUTS

1. Skateboarding on the highway

2. Staring down a pit bull with a pork chop tied to your neck

3. Standing in front of a 100 mph fastball, with no helmet

4. Eating fifty hot chili peppers with no bread or water

5. Starting a new school after fall session has already begun

Okay, I haven't done the first four things. But I've done the fifth thing on the list many times, and when this whole mess started I was going to do it again. Frankly, I'd prefer to eat the fifty chili peppers.

You may not think it's very hard to start a new school after it's already begun, but you would be very, very wrong. This has been my experience: Weeks before I even get there, somebody's know-it-all mom hears that a new kid (me) is moving into the neighborhood and will be attending the school. She tells her kid. Her kid takes this news to the classroom, and the rumors about the new kid (me) start flying: I'm a genius, I'm a dummy, I'm rich, I'm poor, I was kicked out of my last school, I'm in the witness protection program, I have an identical twin brother growing out of my left shoulder. (None of these things is true. See "Facts About Mitchell Mathis" list.)

Then the big day arrives. I check in at the office. The principal walks me down the hall, like a prisoner on his way to his execution. The principal opens a door, interrupting the class, and introduces me. He gets my name wrong, so I politely correct him. After he leaves, the teacher finds a seat for me, usually one within spitball distance of the meanest kid in the class. Then she assigns somebody to be my "buddy," usually the class egghead. For the rest of the day, I'm stuck walking around the school with the guy nobody else would be caught dead with, who tells me a lot of boring details about the school but leaves out the real important stuff.

STUFF YOU REALLY WANT TO KNOW ABOUT A SCHOOL

1. Which bathroom is the good one (safest, least gross, etc.)

2. Which cafeteria food is nasty and which is okay

3. Which water fountains will spray you in the face, and which ones just give a dribble

4. Which yard monitors are the crabbiest

5. Which bullies deliver expert wedgies

This last point is important. I've gotten a lot of wedgies in my day, and they are not pleasant. But I've learned from my mistakes. The main thing I've learned is that first impressions are everything.

TEN THINGS NOT TO DO ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL (BECAUSE THEY MAKE YOU LOOK LIKE A JERK)

1. Don't get a haircut the day before.

2. Don't wear brand-new white sneakers.

3. DON'T HAVE YOUR MOM WITH YOU. (Seriously, don't.)

4. Don't wear pants that are too short.

5. Don't wear hats, jewelry, or cowboy boots.

6. Don't carry a lunch box with a picture of a TV show on it.

7. Don't reveal that you like opera music.

8. If you're really good at something, like, for instance, juggling, don't juggle until at least a month goes by, or people will think you're a show-off.

9. Don't hang around with the class egghead.

AND MOST IMPORTANT:

10. DON'T STAND OUT.

But here's the thing about lists—no matter how much you try to use them to prepare yourself, sometimes they let you down. Sometimes they're not complete, and you don't know it until it's too late. I went over that list a hundred times, but nothing could prepare me for DeMille Elementary. I didn't know it then, but I was already doomed.

My family had just moved to Hollywood, California, and we hadn't fully settled in yet. Our house was filled with packing boxes, and I didn't know where anything was, so we had to buy a backpack, even though I already had one that I really liked packed in a box somewhere. Of course the stores didn't have very many backpacks left, but I managed to get one that didn't look too stupid.

Remember: First impressions are everything.

My mom dropped me off at the principal's office, where I met Principal Lang. He led me out of the main building and past a bunch of long, rectangular buildings called "bungalows." Each one held two classrooms. He opened the door to bungalow twelve, and all eyes shifted to the source of the disruption: me. I can read people pretty well. You could even say I'm gifted in that area. Those eyes were all saying the same thing: I'm glad I'm not you, you poor jerk.

"Excuse me, Mrs. Samuelson," Principal Lang said. "I'd like to introduce your new student. This is Matthew Mitchell. He'll be joining your class…."

"It's Mitchell Mathis…." I said.

"What?"

"My last name is Mathis," I repeated a little louder. "Mitch Mathis."

"I'm sorry. Anyway, Mitchell comes to us from St. Paul, Minnesota. I'm sure everyone here will make him feel welcome." Principal Lang paused to admire the autumn wall decorations and then clapped his hands together. "Well! I'll leave you to it!" He couldn't get out of the classroom fast enough.

Mrs. Samuelson was middle-aged, with short, gray-brown hair, glasses, and a stocky build, and something about her made me like her right away… maybe it was the fact that she kind of smelled like pancakes.

"Mitchell, why don't you take that empty seat?" Mrs. Samuelson pointed to the front desk in the third row, the one right in front of a kid with jet-black hair that fell over one of his eyes, making him look like a punk pirate. He wore a black T-shirt with a skull on it, black jeans, and green sneakers, and he had a diamond stud in his nose. He was fidgeting with a ballpoint pen, clicking it in and out, in and out, in and out, click click click…. Already I wanted a new seat.

"You came at a very good time," Mrs. Samuelson continued. "We're right in the middle of social studies, and this week we are doing a lesson on heritage and family history. Today we are talking about our names. You see, your name says a lot about you, your parents, and their values. Everyone was given the assignment to find out where his or her name came from." She looked out at the class. "Who would like to start?"

A flurry of hands shot up.

"Okay, okay," Mrs. Samuelson said, and laughed. "Dash, why don't you go first. Stand, state your full name, and tell us where it came from."

A tall boy with dark, curly hair and glasses stood up. He was rail thin and had an elegant but slightly bored attitude, like a British aristocrat.

"Dashiell Bogart Silverman. Dash for short. I was named after my parents' favorite mystery writer, Dashiell Hammett, and their favorite film noir actor, Humphrey Bogart. 'Film noir' is what they call those black-and-white crime movies of the nineteen forties, and a lot of these movies were based on Dashiell Hammett's stories. See, film noir, crime, and mystery are my parents' hobby. They're both film writers, and they met in college at a screening of The Maltese Falcon, which, by the way, starred Humphrey Bogart and was based on a novel by Dashiell Hammett. We have the DVD of The Maltese Falcon, so I've probably seen it a hundred times. It's very cool."

Dash sat down with a satisfied smile on his face. You could tell he loved where his name came from. Next, a girl stood up, her crazy-looking red hair held back by a headband decorated with fake bumblebees. She pushed her glasses up on her nose, and her voice clicked along like a typewriter.

"Julia Jodie Schwartz. My dad is a talent agent at Creative Quest Agency, and I was named after his two highest-earning female clients. Interesting fact: If I had been born a boy, my name would've been Brad Tom Johnny Schwartz, based on my dad's highest-earning male clients. Unfortunately, last year these two female clients were stolen from my dad by a competing talent agency, which was totally disloyal of them. My dad spent a lot of time building their careers! If it weren't for him, they'd be waiting tables at Jerry's Deli! Anyway, we don't talk about them anymore. My dad refuses to even say their names, so now my parents just call me J.J."

J.J. sat down. There was a pause as everyone waited for the next person to speak, a really pretty girl with short blond hair, cut like a boy's, and big blue eyes. She was staring out the window, but not at anything in particular. J.J. turned around and pounded the girl's desk. She turned, surprised.

"Is it my turn?" She stood up. She wore an outfit that looked like she'd dug it out of the thrift-shop grab bag: the kind of vest my grandpa would wear over a T-shirt, dress, rainbow-striped leggings, and knee-high moccasin boots. On anyone else it would have looked crazy, but it looked okay on her. "I'm Tangerine Dream Bestor. Both of my parents are actors. They're very creative, so they didn't want to give me an ordinary name. They wanted to give me a name that was meaningful and important, so they named me after their favorite fruit."

She sat down and looked back out the window to the muffled snickers of the class.

"Tangie, perhaps you can tell us where the 'Dream' part of your name came from," Mrs. Samuelson prompted, trying to hide her own amusement. Tangie blinked and rose to her feet again. She was so mellow, it seemed as if everything she did was in slow motion.

"Well, a tangerine is a healthy food that feeds your body, but dreams are food for the soul. Without our dreams we are nothing. They're what drive us and keep us going in hard times. You have to have both to be a complete person, right? It's all about balance."

Wow, that answer wasn't bad! She drifted back to her seat as gently as a leaf settling. I could tell that at least some kids in the class had a new respect for her. Now I wished my name was like hers, maybe something like… Pineapple Courage Mathis.

But when it was my turn I stood up and said, "My name is Mitchell Christopher Mathis, and I was named after my two grandfathers—my dad's father's name is Mitchell, and my mom's father's name is Christopher. I prefer Mitch." Then I sat down. Pretty boring, I thought. So did everybody else.

The punk pirate behind me stood up. Actually, it was more like he jumped up. He moved fast, like a squirrel. Like a squirrel who'd drunk too much coffee.

"I'm Skywalker Ortega, as you all know," he said quickly. "No middle name, so I'm forced to use the wacky first name. If it's not obvious, my dad's favorite movie of all time is Star Wars, and his favorite character is Luke Skywalker. Why he didn't name me Luke, I don't know—I guess it's kind of a joke, but it's no worse than being named after a citrus fruit."

"It could be worse. You could've been named Jar Jar Binks," Dash called out. Everyone laughed.

As kids continued down the rows, I started to see a pattern developing. Out of twenty-eight kids, ten were named after actors. Seven were named after movie characters. Five were named after book characters or authors. Three were named after something in nature, and only three had family names, like me. It was the first clue that I was doomed… but I'll get to that soon enough.

After everyone had a chance to talk about his or her name, we had a math lesson, then we went to the music room, and then it was time for lunch. Mrs. Samuelson had asked Dash to show me around. Dash had a weird habit of leaning forward while he walked, like his head wanted to get someplace and couldn't wait for the rest of his body to catch up.

"DeMille Elementary has what you call an 'open plan,'" he said. "It's really a bunch of bungalows surrounding a courtyard. Kindergarten through third-grade classrooms have their own playground, and fourth through sixth grade get the upper yard. Here's the library," he said, leading me up to a cluster of bungalows. "You've already seen the music room, and the next door is the computer room." He pointed at a door. "Don't go in this bathroom unless you enjoy walking through toilet water. There's always a clogged one in there."

We walked farther, past a building with the words LANGLEY GYMNASIUM painted in huge letters on the outside.

"Who's Langley?" I asked.

"I don't know, some dead guy. Now, over here we have the lunch tables and the cafeteria," he said, pointing to the line of windows. "Don't order the broccoli cheese pasta. Ever. And on Fridays watch out for airborne pudding cups."

I liked this guy.

Since we had both brought our lunches that day, we didn't stop at the cafeteria, but just sat at one of the tables on the patio outside. A group of kids from the class joined us—Skywalker, Tangie, J.J., and Brandon, a blond kid with neatly trimmed hair, a lime-green polo shirt, and creased slacks. Brandon Samuel Goldwyn was named after his great-great-grandfather, who started a movie studio called Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, or MGM, in the nineteen twenties. He seemed to think that made him king of the classroom. I could tell Dash didn't care much for Brandon; he bristled as Brandon brushed crumbs off the table before sitting.

"We're taking a poll," J.J. said. "What's the funniest show on TV? Not classic TV. The show has to be in production right now."

"Monty Montgomery's House of Weird is the best thing on TV," Dash said. "His sketches are brilliant."

"Brilliant?" Brandon scoffed. "They barely make any sense."

"Yeah, well, it's for people who have read a few books—you know, people who think." You know how you get an uncomfortable feeling, like you don't want to be somewhere but you can't leave? That's what I was feeling. But Brandon didn't seem to mind Dash's jab.

"Hey, like my dad always says, 'If it's a thinker, it's a stinker,'" Brandon said with a shrug. "As far as I'm concerned, the House of Weird is the House of Boring."

"Oh yeah? Well, what do you watch?" Dash snorted. "Let me guess, something with a lot of poop jokes."

"Down and Dirty."

"You've got to be kidding!" Dash howled. "That idiotic show is like the amateur hour! It's embarrassing that it's even on the air!"

"Yeah," Skywalker agreed, tossing his hair out of his eyes with a flick of his head. It fell right back. "The production values are really cheap."

"It's the top-rated show on Friday primetime," Brandon pointed out. "And it's got an eighteen share. You guys may not like it, but the rest of America does."

"What about Kiss the Bride?" Tangie said, to break up the argument. "It's really big in England…."

"I prefer the American version, Kick the Bride," J.J. said. "It's just more accessible. What do you think, Mitch?"

They all turned to me. I was completely lost. Production values? Primetime? Eighteen share? It's like they were speaking another language.

"Yes, Mitch," said Tangie. "What do you think is the funniest show on TV?"

"You know, I really don't watch a lot of television," I admitted.

"What's the matter—TV's not good enough for you?" J.J. said. "I'm sick of you movie snobs. Listen, TV has some really great stuff. You're missing out—"

"I don't watch movies either," I interrupted. "My family never really got into that."

Now everyone looked confused.

"You're kidding. How about Star Wars? You have to have seen Star Wars episodes one, two, three, four, five, or six, right?" Skywalker asked.

"Well, I've heard of them of course, and I know the story, sort of, but no, I haven't actually seen any of them. I've flipped through some of the books…."

"The Star Wars saga is not a book!" Skywalker laughed. "Wow, you're really serious! Wow." He shook his head, unable to say more.

"Hey, a lot of people don't go to the movies," Tangie said, coming to my defense. "Renting is a lot cheaper, and you can watch it in your own house."

"I think he's saying he doesn't watch any TV or movies in any form at all," Brandon said, one eyebrow raised. "Isn't that right, Mitch? Not even on an airplane, right?"

"That's impossible," J.J. said. "I mean, unless you belong to some kind of weird cult or something…." She turned to me with a suspicious look.

There was an eerie silence. Then I felt Dash tugging my arm. "Come on, Mitch, I want to show you the gym."

"But we already saw the…"

Dash dragged me away before I could finish. After we got a fair distance from the others, he turned to me.

"You were joking, right? About not watching any TV or movies?"

"Well, you can't watch a lot of TV when you don't own a TV…."

Dash put his hands on his hips and looked up to the sky, like I had presented him with some big problem. "Mitch. Let me give you a little history lesson. Right now we are standing in DeMille Elementary, right? That's Cecil B. DeMille Elementary. Cecil B. DeMille was a major movie director. He produced and directed a whole bunch of films—won tons of awards—but one thing he did that was particularly important was that he made the first full-length feature film ever, and he made it in Hollywood. It was called The Squaw Man, and that film drew more people out to California, to Los Angeles, to Hollywood, to make more films."

"So…?"

"So, you weren't listening in class today. Names are important. You go to a school named after the guy who practically founded Hollywood. You might want to catch a movie or a TV program now and then. You know, to fit in? Think about it."

Dash chucked the rest of his lunch into the garbage can and headed toward the classroom. I would've followed him, but a huge kid blocked my path. He was so big and ugly, he had to be part rhinoceros.

"Hey, weirdo," he said. Then he grabbed the back of my underwear and yanked as hard as he could. My first wedgie of the year. News traveled fast at Cecil B. DeMille Elementary.

The new kid (me) was a weirdo.

同类推荐
  • The Council of Mirrors (Sisters Grimm #9)

    The Council of Mirrors (Sisters Grimm #9)

    In the final volume in the Sisters Grimm series, Sabrina, Daphne, and the rest of the Grimms and their friends must face off against the Master to decide the fate of Ferryport Landing—and the world. When Mirror fails to escape the barrier using Granny Relda's body, he turns to his plan B: killing all the Grimms so that the magical barrier collapses. In the meantime, Sabrina has gathered the other magic mirrors as advisors on how to deal with their mortal enemy. They tell her to join forces with the Scarlet Hand against Mirror, in exchange for offering all the citizens of Ferryport Landing their freedom. This final chapter is the end of the road for several beloved characters, but the conclusion is sure to satisfy devoted fans of the series.
  • The Unusual Suspects (Sisters Grimm #2)
  • Unnamable

    Unnamable

    The Unnamable - so named because he knows not who he may be - is from a nameless place. He speaks of previous selves ('all these Murphys, Molloys, and Malones…') as diversions from the need to stop speaking altogether. But, as with the other novels in the trilogy, the prose is full of marvellous precisions, full of its own reasons for keeping going. …perhaps the words have carried me to the threshold of my story, before the door that opens on my story, that would surprise me, if it opens, it will be I, will be the silence, where I am, I don't know, I'll never know, in the silence you don't know, you must go on, I can't go on, I'll go on.
  • After Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil

    After Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil

    Jim Williams had it all: style, culture, charisma, and sophistication. As a premier antiques dealer in Savannah, he mingled with celebrities, including Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and the Rockefellers, who came to admire his extraordinary treasures. His legacy thrust Savannah into the national spotlight and transformed the genteel city into a tourist mecca.But three decades of hard work came crashing down the night he shot Danny Hansford, his wild young lover. Jim Williams stood trial four times over the next decade for premeditated murder.
  • Sweet Second Love

    Sweet Second Love

    Two years ago, when Linda Kendall's husband and children died in a tragic car accident, she wished she had died too--and believed that her life was over. When she accepts the position of nanny to the Conde Duarte de Dominga's three young charges, she believes she will never again feel passion for another man.But the Conde teaches her differently. Charming and handsome, his presence fills Linda with a desire she'd believed herself incapable of--and reminds her of the joys of being alive. And when he proposes marriage, Linda is tempted to accept. But can she allow herself to love again--and open up her heart once more to loss?
热门推荐
  • 零度寻找

    零度寻找

    您能想象一位美丽而才情横溢的少女,坐着轮跋涉于茫茫大漠吗?为了寻找白马王子,寻找人生理想,她,简伦,就这样开始了她的零度寻找。由零开始的寻找会不会回复到零呢?西部戈壁出生的作者纯懿,以大漠长风和诗化语言引我们进入情节的迷宫,带给我们一份阅读的惊喜!
  • 废柴倾世之少主请接嫁

    废柴倾世之少主请接嫁

    有人告诉我,关于时间线,关于菡萏之心,有一个美丽的传说。倾世之妆,朱雀为聘。心之所爱,吾之卿卿。君是安,华夏古武世家第一继承人,一生憧憬自由,前世死于最信任的人之手。一朝穿越,身无斗气,明珠蒙尘,受制于人。不知澜幽,朱雀之地掌权者,夕幻大陆最隐秘的隐世宗族少主,神秘势力之传承者。玄武之伤,青龙之变,他与她的邂逅,绕成日后的缱绻。轮回谷冒险,生死相依,她为他卸去伪装,他为她献出真心。她是他一生挚爱,噬心痕的证明,菡萏之心的跳动,终将她的心防攻溃。她含泪与他相拥,眼泪,有时候是一种无法言说的幸福。随他前往朱雀,却因废柴之名遭人诟病。金鳞岂是池中物,一遇风云变化龙。魅央宫现,独步天下。我自玲珑笑群芳,不慕春光,不染凄凉。她以一己之力接下各方挑战,坐稳主母之位。彼时,他与她,一个绝代风华,一个名动天下。四方涌动,争端各起。为守护菡萏之心,她不惜以命相护,携手同伴,毅然踏上了未知的旅程…
  • 我的医仙九王妃

    我的医仙九王妃

    战神?你确定坐在轮椅上的废物是战神?站起来都困难,干脆叫坐神可好!前两天还在嘲笑人家是坐神,谁成想,她竟然成了坐神的王妃。那好吧,既然你成了我的,自然不容许被人欺负了去。一个来自二十一世纪的特种兵,真正的战神,who怕who啊。
  • 刁蛮小药凰

    刁蛮小药凰

    从末世而来的军医宁小药有一个秘密,她能听懂小动物说话~肥猫黑胖说:督师是好人,喵嘎!麻雀灰爷爷说:督师是好人,啾!小耗子油瓶也说:督师是好人,吱!黄鼠狼大仙更是说:你跟督师是天生的一对~所有的小萌物都跟宁小药说,督师,督师,督师!于是宁小药相信,这个叫楼子规的督师一定是个好人,至于跟她是不是天生的一对……肥猫黑胖给了宁小药一爪子,督师被你下旨押到刑场要凌迟处死了啊,你这个昏君!!!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 村长逃犯

    村长逃犯

    村长王德宽上任不几天,就打人。据说下手狠,先给一个满脸花,后给一个旁踹,估计这两动作,送给谁谁也好不了哪去。果不其然,经派出所插手,刑事鉴定出来:轻微伤。轻微伤是啥概念?沾了一个轻字,就好像没事似的。那么想可就错了。这一个轻字,因为进入刑事范畴,你得判刑。拿老百姓话来讲,得把你猴起来。猴,当地土语,跟抓一个意思。不过呢,法是靠人来执行,政策也不全是板上钉钉子。如果私了,这也不算啥大不了的。通常一般或者大概,都采取私了。所谓多一事不如少一事,就这么个理。
  • 穿越成为农家女

    穿越成为农家女

    一朝穿越一介女特工居然成了五岁的农家小妞,父亲上了战场渺无音讯,家里一贫如洗没有隔夜粮,只有母亲带着他们几个瘦的只剩皮包骨的兄妹,还有那为了争夺家产不惜将他们一家赶出家门的极品亲戚,且看她杨蝉儿如何在古代发家致富,带着一家人过上和和美美的好日子。
  • 财迷萌妃:邪魅王爷有点宠

    财迷萌妃:邪魅王爷有点宠

    在一次车祸过后,米离睁开眼睛,发现自己来到一个自己从未听说的朝代。穿就穿了,还没有前身的记忆;没有记忆就算了,还毁容;毁容就算了,还没有所谓的便宜爹爹来收养自己。怎么遇到自己就这么倒霉呢?等自己赚了小钱,眼前的男人又是怎么回事?威胁自己,讨好自己,捉弄自己······当自己是宠物猫啊~“这位帅哥,麻烦让让,我还准备在这里摆擂台招亲呢!”米离不客气地对着眼前的男子说道。“想带着我的孩子嫁给别人,你以为我是吃素的么?”于是,那人一把抱起米离,往自家府邸走去。女主爱财,却不贱卖自己。男主腹黑,为她钟情。
  • 《论语》人物评传

    《论语》人物评传

    本书第一次把《论语》里的所有历史人物从书中剥离出来,结合《左传》、《国语》、《尚书》、《史记》等史书以及《孟子》、《庄子》、《墨子》、《荀子》、《韩非子》、《淮南子》等诸子书中的有关记载,把他们作为一个独立的历史人物(而不是《论语》中的“一句话”人物)进行系统研究,每个人物有“传”有“评”。
  • 在路上:生活和思想

    在路上:生活和思想

    人生所有的一切,都在我们必经的路上。我们从远古走来,就如我们必然走向未来一样。没有人能够从摇篮就看到坟墓,却有人能够从自我看到世界、从相对接近绝对、从偶然和有限走向必然和无限,更有人能够从渺小走向伟大、从卑贱走向高尚、从繁芜和浑浊归真于清明和素朴。虽然鲜有生活中的先见之明,却不乏思想中的先知先觉。
  • 神谕

    神谕

    《神谕》是一部反映我国清未帮会政治历史的长篇小说。描写洪门天地会一代枭雄阮大成趁机而起,旋即覆没的史实。