What was the real name of Mingyue that year?
Shi Yue, a native of Wuhan, Hubei, was born in 1980. At that time, Yue Ming, a civil servant who didn't major in history, restated and rewritten history in a simple and even entertaining way, which triggered a "fever of reading history" for those who were "infected", which became a great spectacle in domestic cultural circles in recent years and also caused a lot of controversy. After Yi Zhongtian, a new writer named "Bright Moon of the Year" appeared on the Internet recently. His long historical article "Things of the Ming Dynasty" was serialized on his blog three months ago, with more than one million hits, and was officially published by the publishing house in 2006. Some people say that if Yi Zhongtian's historical research is based on the grassroots of scholars, then Those Things in the Ming Dynasty are pure grassroots works, and its popularity makes the historical comments return to the grassroots itself. Author Yue Ming has also become the focus of attention. A 29-year-old young man, an ordinary civil servant who is not majoring in literature and history, has restored history to be clear, profound, full and round with such sophisticated, popular and humorous techniques. At that time, Yue Ming's works "Those Things in the Ming Dynasty" sold more than10 million copies, which is one of the largest 15 sets of books since the reform and opening up. It is the best-selling historical reading in the past 30 years, and has won many honors such as "Best Book on Sina Book Billboard", "Best Five-Star Book for Life" and "Excellent Amazon Bestseller Award", ranking among the top ten bestsellers in China, ranking first in the 2007-2008 series. As "Those Things in the Ming Dynasty" started from the network rivers and lakes, it was warmly welcomed by readers. That year, Mingyue was called a master of grassroots storytelling, and everyone's recognition confirmed Mingyue's words that year: "History should be written well." Internet celebrities were originally considered "very ordinary" by leaders, and were reused after becoming famous. Recently, he was seconded to Beijing (as the editor of the magazine "Golden Key" under the General Administration of Customs). Although it is also about history, the brushwork of the bright moon in that year is not the brushwork of those history books in the past. Instead, it is a fresh and vivid brushwork full of vitality and vitality. In his works, characters are no longer rigid names and symbols, but living people, and those events are ups and downs, which make people want to stop. Tactics, tactics and tactics are all to my liking. History can be regarded as a peak on the side of a mountain, and the bright moon and his "Things in the Ming Dynasty" obviously did not bloom. The online debate and questioning about the bright moon has never stopped. A well-known online writer who is loved, admired and criticized at the same time has become a candidate for our cutting-edge writer of the year. Mingyue, a pioneer of spiritual history in 2006, emphasized that writing history means writing people, and writing people means writing hearts. The long article "Those Things in the Ming Dynasty" soared in Tianya Forum, and then moved to Sina. Tianya and Sina's monthly click-through rate exceeded one million, which triggered the "Alum" riots, and related events were named "Mingyuemen" by the media. China writer Ou Fawei pointed out that Mingyue restored history with her own soul, while human beings restored the soul in his history. Member of Ming History Society, Youth Calendar