
All Out of Love
2018 • Drama, Family • NR
Half-siblings Jiang Sheng and Liang Sheng share a deep bond that turns into forbidden love. After Liang Sheng disappears in an accident, Jiang Sheng searches for him with the help of Cheng Tianyou, who falls for her. Just as she moves on and marries Tianyou, Liang Sheng returns, forcing her to confront her past and make a heart-wrenching choice.
Why you should read the novel
Loved the sweeping emotions in All Out of Love (2018)? Read the original novel, Liang Sheng, Can We Not Be Sad by Le Xiaomi. The source book delivers deeper interiority, rawer feeling, and richer context the screen can only suggest.
Le Xiaomi’s lyrical prose explores memory, longing, and complicated family bonds with nuance. If you crave character-driven romance, the novel’s layered psychology, atmosphere, and slow-burn tension offer a more immersive experience than any episode recap.
For readers comparing All Out of Love vs the book, starting with Le Xiaomi’s novel clarifies motivations, themes, and symbolism. Seek an authorized translation to enjoy the complete, uncut story the drama only hints at—perfect for fans of Chinese romance novels and source material purists.
Adaptation differences
Key differences between the All Out of Love TV series and the book begin with emphasis: the novel, Liang Sheng, Can We Not Be Sad, centers more closely on the tangled, taboo-tinged bond between Jiang Sheng and Liang Sheng, while the drama foregrounds Cheng Tianyou and expands workplace/family arcs to broaden mainstream appeal.
Broadcast standards shape the adaptation. The series softens morally gray choices and dilutes the intensity of the step-sibling romance; the book treats that relationship with frankness, interior monologue, and psychological depth that television rarely sustains.
Structurally, the show adds and stretches side plots, merges or introduces supporting characters, and leans on flashbacks and cliffhangers. By contrast, the novel reads tighter and more cohesive, threading recurring motifs and symbolism that reward close reading and deepen the emotional stakes.
Tone and resolution also diverge. The drama chooses a glossier, more hopeful, and open-ended finish aligned with broadcast expectations, whereas the book remains bittersweet and contemplative—consistent with Le Xiaomi’s melancholy style and the novel’s literary intent.
All Out of Love inspired from
Liang Sheng, Can We Not Be Sad
by Le Xiaomi