Compiled by Ren Fang (460-508), a famous writer in the Liang Dynasty of the Southern Dynasties, 2 volumes. Ren Fang, courtesy name Yansheng, was born in Bochang, Le'an (now Shouguang, Shandong). He was good at writing table memorials and applied prose. It was first seen in the novel category of "Chongwen General Catalog". It was not recorded before the Tang Dynasty, so it is very suspicious. There is an anonymous preface at the front of the book, saying that Ren Fang "has a collection of 30,000 volumes of books at home, so there are many anecdotes, which he collected from his secretary and wrote the upper and lower volumes of "Xin Shu Yi Ji"", which shows that he followed Zu Chongzhi's book title. Yan Kejun and Lu Xinyuan's Song (?) edition of "Ji Xue Ji" quoted from Ren Fang's "Shu Yi Ji" seems to have existed in the Tang Dynasty. However, the book contains events from the Xiaochang period of the later Wei Dynasty and the Heqing period of the Northern Qi Dynasty. It was written after Ren Fang's death, so at least it is by no means the original work. Many of the materials in the book are found in other ancient books. Most of the records are anecdotes and trivial matters, which are similar to "Natural History" and have less story-telling. The "General Catalog of Sikuquanshu" believes that "perhaps later generations cited "Shu Yiji" from other books, and with the help of miscellaneous notes from other books, it is enough to form a volume."