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Guo Jingming Born June 6, 1983 (1983-06-06) (age 27) This is a Chinese name; the family name is Guo. Guo Jingming (Chinese: 郭敬明) (born June 6, 1983 in Zigong, Sichuan) is a Chinese author. His books are popular among young people in China, and he was the second best-selling writer in China in 2005.[1] Guo has published 5 books so far.[citation needed] Also he is now the editor of the magazine 'I5LAND'. Contents 1 Biography 2 Works 3 Claims of plagiarism 4 References 5 External links // Biography Guo has studied at Shanghai University(not officially graduated).[2] Works Guo's first book, Huan Cheng (lit. The City of Fantasies), was first published as a series on the magazine Meng Ya. It impressed the public made Guo famous.[citation needed] Claims of plagiarism The next few books from him were also successful until later, in December 2004, a court in Beijing ruled one of his novel Meng Li Hua Luo Zhi Duo Shao (Never-Flowers in Never Dream, according to English subtitle on the book) to have plagiarized another Chinese novel Quan Li Quan Wai ("Inner and Outer" on the first edition cover) by writer Zhuang Yu. Guo was fined ¥200,000. (approx. US$25,000). From that time, the views on him began to diverge. Some still think that he is a writer with great potential and ability, while others argue that he is simply a product of the commercialized society. Three of Guo's books were accused of plagiarism: his earlier novel "City of Fantasy" was accused of copying Clamp's RG Veda, his second book Never Flowers in Never Dreams was ruled to have copied a Chinese novel, and a later one, Xia Zhi Wei Zhi, about a boy who copied books, was accused of using dialogues from Ai Yazawa's Nana. References ^ Jin Bo, Report Reveals Best-Selling Writers, China Daily, 14–15 January 2006 ^ "Guo Jingming Succeeds in City of Fantasy", September 10, 2004 External links Guo Jingming's Blog Bestselling Novelist Must Pay Up for Plagiarism NYT-article about Guo Jingming This article about a Chinese writer or poet is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. v • d • e