share time: 2026-01-04 06:06:23
Lin Xiaoman, a publishing editor, has a do-or-die task: get Su Ye, author of the ten-year poor-selling *Post-Youth Poetry*, to write a sequel—otherwise, the entire series gets axed. But when she finds Su Ye, the high school boy in a white shirt who wrote "Youth is an unopened letter" is now a "down-and-out poet" fixing bikes in an old alley, vowing "never to touch poetry again." His mother’s death years ago shattered his faith in his writing—he thought his idealized "youth" was worthless against reality. Lin digs out an unread love letter Su Ye gave her, with a crumpled draft inside: "If youth has a sequel, I want to write..." She points to the phoenix tree downstairs: "You wrote it'd 'stand eternal,' but it broke in a typhoon last year and sprouted new buds this year—youth isn’t a perfect poem. It’s the courage to keep writing." And in Su Ye’s toolbox? Ten years of written-and-torn fragments—every line bears Lin Xiaoman’s name.
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