The Day of the Divorce, the Abused Female Lead Turns Around and Marries the Tyrant - Reviews

The Day of the Divorce, the Abused Female Lead Turns Around and Marries the Tyrant
+Add to Custom List
Sort
Add review
... Read More
This novel begins with a somewhat promising premise that captures the reader's attention, but unfortunately, it quickly devolves into a chaotic amalgamation of inconsistent character arcs, superficial romantic drama, and bewildering plot decisions. As the story progresses towards the midway point, the transformation of the supposed male lead is nothing short of disheartening. He morphs into a lovesick puppy, devoid of any backbone or agency, leaving readers questioning his initial appeal. In contrast, the heroine, who boasts about her progressive views on women's sexual freedom, remains a virgin and consistently chooses to engage only with the male lead. This contradictory behavior echoes the familiar narrative double standard: advocating for female autonomy while simultaneously elevating virginity and monogamy as the moral pinnacle. To make matters worse, the heroine entangles both the male lead and several secondary characters in awkward public "relationships," only to abruptly discard them for vague or nonsensical reasons. The transformation of these powerful and seemingly aloof alpha males into infatuated fools for her is never convincingly depicted. What is presented as romance feels more like a puzzling plot device, leaving readers bewildered rather than enamored. Additionally, the subplot involving the Queen Mother is another significant misstep. She has children with multiple men, including those outside the royal family, which introduces a chaotic sexual dynamic within the palace. However, this subplot lacks proper explanation or emotional depth, coming off as a mere gimmick meant to shock rather than to add meaningful complexity to the narrative. Compounding the reader's frustration is the confusing formatting in the Chinese version of the novel. One of the male leads’ names often appears as a "?" instead of the intended character name. This consistent error leads to frequent mix-ups, particularly in scenes where both male leads are present, further muddying the understanding of the relationships and dynamics at play. By the time I reached the halfway mark, my patience had worn thin. The inconsistent writing, abrupt personality shifts, and superficial themes rendered the reading experience a tedious slog. In conclusion, this novel is a prime example of sloppy execution and inconsistency, ultimately bordering on unreadability. My advice? Save your time and skip this one. **Verdict:** Sloppy, inconsistent, and borderline unreadable. Pass. **Rating:** 2/5, and that’s being generous.
... Read More
Cen Fv's character introduction is my favorite part after the modern-meets-ancient humor. That moment in the carriage sequence builds tension perfectly. The pacing across these early chapters is tight—no filler, just setup and payoff. The Empress Dowager's implied threat through Southern Xinjiang tribute feels like setting up future court intrigue, and I'm actually curious how that connects to the main plot. The emotional stakes feel real even when the premise is absurd. Looking forward to seeing how this adaptation of the original novel's framework plays out.
... Read More
The overall reading experience is surprisingly addictive for something that's clearly playing with genre conventions. It doesn't take itself too seriously, but it also doesn't mock the source material. It respects the angst novel format while having fun subverting it through the protagonist's practicality.
... Read More
I want to know more about the original female lead's backstory. The fact that she knelt in rain for three days to get this marriage shows she was deeply in love with Xiao Ziqian once. But Song Yaoshi doesn't have those memories or feelings, which creates an interesting emotional disconnect.
... Read More
The "stunned for a second, and then slowly probed" moment when Song Yaoshi finally recognizes Xiao Ziqian is perfect. You can feel her brain catching up to the situation, realizing the random handsome man in her room is her supposed husband. The awkwardness is palpable.
... Read More
The dramatic irony of Song Yaoshi knowing the original plot gives these scenes extra tension. When Xiao Ziqian smashes the table, she flinches because she knows in the original story worse violence follows. When Lin Rou'er speaks humbly, she watches for manipulation. Her genre knowledge is her shield.
... Read More
The author does a nice job with the secondary characters having distinct voices. Chang Le's spoiled entitlement, Eunuch Fu's professional obsequiousness, Qingwu's naive devotion—they each sound different without relying on dialect gimmicks. That's clean character writing.
... Read More
I actually felt a little bad for Xiao Ziqian during the banquet when the Emperor subtly threatened him about mistreating the Chancellor's daughter. Like, yes he's an ass, but having your sovereign publicly warn you about how to treat your wife must sting. Though he earned it.
... Read More
Song Yaoshi's "I don't depend on the client for a living anymore" internal monologue about husbands versus fathers as resources perfectly summarizes her worldview shift. She's stopped seeing Xiao Ziqian as her problem because she has bigger allies now. The Emperor is just another "client" to manage well.
... Read More
The pacing across these chapters is solid. We get setup, conflict, escalation, palace drama, and several satisfying confrontation scenes without any lag period. Each segment moves things forward and reveals character rather than spinning wheels with description.
... Read More
One thing that bugs me—how does no one in this house notice that Song Yaoshi is acting completely different from before? The servants just accept her new personality? But I guess in transmigration novels you have to accept some suspension of disbelief about how quickly people adapt to changed behavior.
... Read More
The scene where the Emperor praises Song Yaoshi's dancing skills and Xiao Ziqian "stiffens" is such a loaded moment. You realize the original female lead actually had talents and accomplishments before she got ground down by this marriage. It adds tragedy to the comedy.

Leave a comment

You must be logged in to leave comments. or