Saifeng (1921.2~2004.6.19) Male, whose real name is Li Genhong, his pen name is Sai Feng, his original name is Li Jingyuan, and he used to use the pen name Zhang Gong, etc. Famous poet. A native of Lingbao County, Henan Province. He studied in his hometown in his early years, and went to Yan'an in 1940. He worked in the art team of Northern Shaanxi Public School, and later returned to his hometown to recuperate. After graduating from Henan West Normal College in 1942, he successively edited literary supplements for Xingdu Daily in Luoyang, China Times in Kaifeng and Dagang Daily in Wuhan, and also worked in Chengdu, Chongqing, Nanjing, Shanghai and other places. Work in journalism. In 1946, he went to Jiaodong Liberated Area, edited "Jiaodong Literature and Art" and served as a frontline reporter. After the liberation of Jinan in September 1948, he moved to the city and served as the editorial board member and editorial director of the "Shandong Youth" newspaper. In 1949, he served as a member of the Preparatory Committee of the Shandong Provincial Federation of Literary and Art Circles and participated in the founding of the monthly "Shandong Literature and Art". In 1951, he was transferred to the Standing Committee of the Henan Federation of Literary and Art Circles and deputy director of the Liaison Department and Creative Department of the Provincial Federation of Literary and Art Circles. In 1955, he was implicated in the anti-Hu Feng movement and was forced to stop creating. In 1958, he was mistakenly classified as a "rightist" and spent many years in labor reform in the Yellow River area. He was rehabilitated in 1979. In September of the same year, he was transferred to the Jinan Federation of Literary and Art Circles and served as deputy editor-in-chief of the literary monthly "Quancheng" and deputy director of the Literary Creation Research Office of the Municipal Federation of Literary and Art Circles. He retired in 1983 and served as consultant and honorary chairman of Jinan Writers Association. In 1998, he was awarded the title of "Honorary Citizen" by Sanmenxia City, Henan Province.
On July 7, 1937, in order to oppose the Japanese imperialist invasion of China, when he was a junior high school student, he published his first poem in a newspaper - a short poem titled "The Bow", which won him Good reviews. Since then, he began his literary creation career with the Yellow River as the theme and the theme of expressing the nation and the people's spirit. In 1945, he joined the "Chuncao Poetry Club" and served as the director of the northern branch. He published poetry collections "Songs of the North" and "There is still a sky beyond the sky". The book "One Hundred Yellow Water Ballads" written in 1946 was selected by the supplement "Starry Sky" of Shanghai's "Times Daily". In the winter of the same year, at the invitation of the Communist Party of China's Shanghai underground publication "People", he wrote the article "Henan under the Rule of Warlords". From 1946 to 1948, he wrote the short story "The Story of Li Yanfeng" and two poems, and edited and published the book "How to Write". "People's Writer Zhao Shuli" written in 1947 was published by Shanxi-Hebei-Luyu Xinhua Bookstore. In 1949, he published the short story collection "Voice of the People" and the children's literature collections "Little Cultural Girl" and "A Coachman's Child". In 1951, he wrote and published the novella "The Rise Together" and the short story collection "The New Wife Harvests Wheat". Two chapters of the novel "Pingshan Ji" written in 1953 were published in the Shanghai "Novel" monthly magazine. In 1954, he created and published a short story collection "Seeds". After retiring in 1983, he created and published poetry collections "Little Flowers on the Curved Road", "Love of Roots and Leaves" (cooperated with his wife), "Selected Lyric Poems of Sai Feng", "Song of Marching Horses", "The Past", and "Mother River" , "Selected Sai Feng Poems", "Landscape Chords", "Playing and Singing Life", "Traces" (cooperated with his wife) and many other poetry and prose collections. He has created nearly 3,000 poems and more than 2 million words in his lifetime, which have had a great influence inside and outside the province.