Fortune Telling Collection - Free divination - There is a cartoon that I liked to read when I was a child. What is the relationship between reasoning and adventure?

There is a cartoon that I liked to read when I was a child. What is the relationship between reasoning and adventure?

I think what you are talking about is the first novel creation of J.J. Abraham, an American genius writer and director, who collaborated with the famous writer Doug doster. S is a book in a book. Its main content is a book called "The Ship of Theseus" by mystery novels, which is also mixed with a bunch of strange props, such as white napkins with maps, postcards with postmarks, compasses with compasses, sealed confidential documents, and various unidentified photos, stationery, old newspaper clippings, library tickets, etc. There are as many as 23 attachments. Some enthusiastic readers read it four or five times and gave detailed reading strategies: First, while reading the story, they read Eric's notes written in pencil in this book. Then there is the dialogue written by Jane in blue and Eric in black, which is the marginal note that Jane just started after seeing this book. Later, after reading the book for the first time, Jane changed an orange pen and Eric changed a green pen. The third time, I only read the marginal notes written by Jane in purple pen and Eric in red pen. Finally, for the fourth time, look at what these two people wrote with black pens.