<正>AS the debate and attention surrounding China’s twentysomething writers has barely faded, the limelight of the nation’s publishing world is now shining on their even younger peers. The People’s Literature, the PRC’s first literature magazine and known as the "cradle of Chinese writers," recently launched a writing competition for the "post-1990," the generation born in the 1990s. Though the results will not be known until next April, the event has already attracted a