Wu Men Tu Ji (also known as Jia Qinglu), written in the Qing Dynasty, is a local chronicle about Suzhou. Please find out who is the author of this book.

Jia Qinglu is the work of Lu Gu, a Suzhou scholar in Qing Dynasty. This book records the festivals and customs in Suzhou and its nearby areas in December, and cites a large number of ancient and modern geography, poems and classics for textual research one by one. Beautiful writing and detailed narration have the function of preserving rural literature. It is an important material for studying the local history and social history of Suzhou in Ming and Qing Dynasties. Lu Gu also wrote "A Record of Overseas Chinese in Yitong", and said that "Jia Qinglu takes time as the longitude, while overseas Chinese in Tongyong take space as the latitude", so it was merged into one book. This book focuses on Suzhou's scenic spots and historical sites and the remains of ancient and modern celebrities, and is composed of architecture, anecdotes and poems, which complement each other from different angles.

The author is Lu Gu in Qing Dynasty. In a word, Lu Gu is a metal gray, a self-styled tea mushroom mountain man. A native of Wuxian, Suzhou, was born and died during the reign of Daoguang Xianfeng in the Qing Dynasty, and there is no clear record.

At present, only 1999 Jiangsu Ancient Books Publishing House has published Lu; Tongqiaoyi was published by Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House 1980.