Xiaofeng told him that he already knew what had happened, but it was all a misunderstanding. He also knows what kind of person Zhao Xiaobo is. Zhao Xiaobo had an accident in an accident, resulting in lifelong disability, so he divorced him.
Hearing this, Yang Xun sighed with emotion: If I had known this, why did I turn around and leave without looking back, leaving Xiaofeng alone in a daze? On the way, Yang Xun met Zhao Xiaobo again. He is physically disabled and homeless, begging for food in the street. Yang Xun couldn't bear it, gave him some money, patted him on the shoulder and said, The situation is reversed! Standing up and leaving, Zhao Xiaobo looked at his back and burst into tears.
Extended data:
With a rare grand pattern, Great Rivers comprehensively, meticulously and profoundly shows the economic reform, social life changes and people's mental outlook changes since China's reform and opening up, and is known as "a wonderful book describing China's reform and opening up".
From 1977 to 1992 South Talk, from the germination of township enterprises to the rise of China manufacturing, from real estate reform to the financial crisis in 2008. ...
By telling the different experiences of typical representatives such as Song Yunhui, a leader of state-owned enterprises, Lei Dongbao, a township entrepreneur, Yang Xun, a self-employed individual, and Liu Jun, an intellectual returned from overseas, the novel vividly depicts the frontier representatives during the reform and opening up period, and truly restores the entrepreneurial life, struggle course and destiny of a generation.