Once there was a flock of sheep. The shepherd led them to a new pasture. Along the way, one little lamb got separated. The rest of the flock stopped and made noises until the shepherd found the lost lamb and brought it back. Then they all happily continued to the new grazing land.
I'm not entirely sure what a 'flock novel' specifically is. It might be a very new or niche concept, or perhaps it's a term used in a particular community or by a certain author that I'm not familiar with.
The characters included: Supporting actor-Observer No. 1. Is there a possibility that this is the real protagonist, supporting actor-Original Body, and this is even more heavyweight? Male actor-Fang Cheng, an ordinary top student?
Pretty good at cooking, female lead-Ai Bishui, genius girl
The type that couldn't get fat from eating. The supporting actress, Ning Yu 'an, only looked cute and soft, but she wasn't fat at all!
"Pigeon" Author: A Milk Fish. It was a sci-fi/interstellar civilization novel with science, intelligence, interstellar, hard sci-fi, and technological elements.
[User recommendation: 95]
Sci-fi Points:
[Inhumane Points: ]
[Current World: Yes]
[System: No]
Hard sci-fi, chaotic system life, metallic creatures, experimental creatures destroying the world…
I hope you will like this book.
Well, 'The Flock' is purely fictional. The author came up with the plot and characters from their creative mind rather than drawing from real-life events.
In war stories, 'o little flock fear not the foe' can be a source of comfort and courage. It might be used to encourage the soldiers who are like the 'little flock'. It gives the idea that they should not be afraid of the enemy, no matter how powerful the foe seems.
Sure. The term 'phoenix gathering' was used to describe a gathering of talents. It was a metaphor for the gathering of outstanding talents. Therefore, a phoenix gathering could be used to describe people.