Notice:(You can think Lin yuan's main problem is solved so book is finished)

This was my first book.

I didn't have a fancy cover when I started—just took out my phone one evening and snapped a photo of the night sky. That quiet image became the face of a dream I wanted to share.

At first, I wrote slowly. I focused on detailed scenes, world-building,power systems, and how ordinary people might live in a cultivation world. I thought I needed to create a new calendar, explain how life worked at low levels, and describe every character's appearance in detail.

But as I kept writing, I learned.

I learned that too much world-setting can push readers away. I learned that long descriptions often go unread. I realized that what really matters is story, emotion, and momentum. Not every detail. Not every rule.

I applied for a writing contract once—and got rejected.

I thought, "That's okay. I still have two more tries."

So I adjusted. I made my chapters shorter. I started writing with ChatGPT's help—getting feedback, fixing mistakes—and directly posting improved versions.

Still, the silence stayed.

Few views. Fewer comments. No feedback.

And I started to wonder:

> Is there any point in continuing this book?

But… something in me didn't stop.

Even when no one clapped. Even when no one was watching.

Now, I've made a choice.

I'm ending this book here—not out of defeat, but out of growth. I've learned what I needed to learn, and I'm ready to start fresh. A new book, built with everything I've learned.

It's called:

> "May the Moon Hide My Identity."

It will follow the same core story—Lin Yuan's path, his secrets, his battles—but with sharper writing, stronger pacing, and more focus on what really matters.

If you've read this far, even silently:

Thank you. You walked this journey with me, and I'll never forget that.

If you want to see where this story truly begins,

come find me —Hidden by Moonlight.

May God bless us all.

May our stories never die.

— Ashraful