Rebirth in the '70s: The Capitalist's Daughter Only Wants a Divorce
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Shu Yue died after being poisoned by her daughter, Cheng Hui. On her deathbed, Cheng Hui revealed that she was not her biological child but the daughter of Cheng Jing’en and Huang Fang. The babies had been swapped at birth. Shu Yue’s own son had drowned at three or four years old, and the entire Shu family, including her aging relatives, was poisoned together. Overcome with hatred and despair, Shu Yue breathed her last.She awakened in excruciating pain, as if in childbirth, and recognized that she had returned to the day she gave birth. While still weak, she heard Huang Fang and her mother plotting to exchange Huang Fang’s newborn daughter for Shu Yue’s son. They had induced Shu Yue’s premature labor by scattering beans at her door and had starved her to keep her unconscious. Now, as Huang Fang hesitated, her mother urged her to hurry. Shu Yue forced her eyes open and saw them approaching. She slapped both mother and daughter, accusing them of child swapping and intentional injury. She threatened to report them to the Public Security Bureau. Huang Fang and Mother Huang panicked and tried to intimidate her with her status as a Capitalist Miss, but Shu Yue refused to back down. Weak from childbirth, she let them leave, then bolted the door and held her son, vowing to protect him.Shu Yue’s life had been defined by her background. She was the daughter of a wealthy capitalist family. After her mother died and her father remarried, she was raised by her maternal grandfather and grandmother. When the family faced political persecution, they arranged for her to go to the countryside as an educated youth to spare her the worst. They divided their savings and valuables among the younger generation. Alone in Heilongjiang Province, a fellow educated youth named Sun Qing exposed her family’s capitalist background, branding her a Capitalist Young Lady. The villagers ostracized her and subjected her to constant harassment. One afternoon, a local troublemaker, Li Lao San, tried to assault her. She fled and fell into a river. He pursued her, intending to take advantage of her in the water, but a soldier, Cheng Jingchuan, arrived and kicked him away, then dove in to save her. On the bank, he performed first aid, pressing on her chest. The villagers gossiped, and Li Lao San’s mother demanded that Shu Yue marry her son, claiming she had been compromised. Desperate to escape a worse fate, Shu Yue turned to Cheng Jingchuan and declared that he had hugged and touched her and must marry her. Cheng Jingchuan angrily said he was only saving her, but Shu Yue forced the marriage, knowing she needed protection.Thus she became the daughter-in-law of the Cheng family, where her background earned her contempt. Her husband was the second son, while the eldest son was Cheng Jing’en, married to Huang Fang. The Cheng family valued sons over daughters. When Shu Yue was about to give birth, her parents-in-law left to attend the youngest son’s wedding in the city, leaving only Huang Fang and her mother to “help.” In her previous life, the child swap succeeded. Shu Yue woke to find a baby girl beside her. She raised that girl, Cheng Hui, with love and sacrifice, exchanging her own clothes for rice soup to feed her. Yet that girl grew up to poison her entire family. The son she had borne was given to Huang Fang and died young. Now, having scuttled the swap, Shu Yue held her son, a healthy boy. She reflected on the past: her maternal uncles who sheltered her, the division of family assets, the months of isolation in the village, the river rescue, and the forced marriage that brought her to this point.She knew that in the previous life she had been too weak and trusting, which led to her death and her family’s destruction. Now, she was determined to change everything. She would protect her son with her life, expose the crimes of Huang Fang and her mother, and seek justice for herself and those she lost. The road ahead was dangerous. She was isolated on the edge of the village with no neighbors to call, and the Cheng family would likely side with the eldest daughter-in-law. But Shu Yue was no longer the same woman. She had the knowledge of what happened before and the resolve to fight. She would raise her son to be strong, and she would make all her enemies pay. Holding her sleeping child in her arms, Shu Yue planned her course of action. The rebirth was a gift, and she intended to use every moment to forge a new destiny for herself and her son.

Associated Names

重生七零:资本家小姐一心想离婚
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2026-05-29lightnovelasia c23
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30. Overall, I think this is a really solid start. The tropes are familiar but executed with good pacing and emotional depth. I just hope the revenge is satisfying and doesn’t get bogged down in too much melodrama. So far, it’s hitting all the right notes for a binge read.
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2 The emotional weight of her son drowning in her past life is still haunting me. That’s the core tragedy. To lose a child and never even know it was yours… and to raise the one who killed you. It’s layers of pain. That’s why every moment she holds her son now feels like a victory.
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2 I have to mention the “State-run Restaurant” detail. It’s a small thing, but it really sells the era. The in-laws prioritizing the city wedding over their pregnant daughters-in-law? That is so painfully realistic for the time. It says everything about how little Shu Yue mattered to them.
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2 The setting of 1975 is so specific. The Cultural Revolution era adds so much tension. One wrong word and you’re branded a capitalist. It’s the perfect backdrop for a revenge story because power is so fragile and fear is everywhere. The author uses it well.
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2 I like that Shu Yue admits she’s being a bit of a shrew now. She knows it’s necessary to survive. That self-awareness is refreshing. She’s not pretending to be noble; she’s just doing what needs to be done. It makes her more relatable and her actions feel justified.
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2 The “white-eyed wolf” phrase is so fitting for Cheng Hui, the fake daughter. You raise someone with all your love, and they turn around and destroy everything. That kind of betrayal is the deepest cut. It makes me hope that in this timeline, maybe Cheng Hui never gets born or gets a different fate.
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