Cô gái văn chương book girl and the captive fool năm 2024

Emily's mother illness has gotten worse. Not only that but a monster has been attacking the village. Due to this Emily sets out on a quest to get medication for her moth...

Cô gái văn chương book girl and the captive fool năm 2024

A Tale of Twoby Landyn Martin

Jane, a poor lamia who was taken from her family and sold in the black market to a rich millionaire named James Jones. will He be a kind man, or a horrible monster who w...

Cô gái văn chương book girl and the captive fool năm 2024

Reborn As Lamia Killer Sans!by DancingAce1

(The old story description, the tags, and the story category somehow got deleted- I already fixed it though. Anyways, so this is the new, shorter, story description!) To...

Cô gái văn chương book girl and the captive fool năm 2024

A Duet Before Dawnby SpiralMuse

An average night at the Pizza Plex turns awry with a dangerous encounter with Monty Gator. However, a meeting with the newest member of the band gives a little hope to t...

Cô gái văn chương book girl and the captive fool năm 2024

A Bitty On the Streetsby TAYTAY

Y/N was just finishing her(or his) nightly walk around the town's block, when all of a sudden she(he) heard yelling and some sort of crying. She(he) went to investigate...

Cô gái văn chương book girl and the captive fool năm 2024

Nothing new... [ treech]by Maya39662

Tamra plinth is the daughter and heir to half of the plinths money behind her older brother sejanus plinth her brother always had a way to make everything about the hung...

Cô gái văn chương book girl and the captive fool năm 2024

Velvetby miguel_oc12

Richard is in love with love. He recently discovered girls and now he cant stop looking at them, but when a new girl came to school, things might change... for the worst.

Cô gái văn chương book girl and the captive fool năm 2024

Fear and Feastby

This is a story about a young man by the name of Francis who was a confident person(or a fool) walking around the dark forest alone at night when suddenly his fate was s...

Cô gái văn chương book girl and the captive fool năm 2024

Oc Creationby 💫•Orange Pawn•💫

This will contain all the Oc's I've made in 2021 and this year, most of these are either made with Gacha Club or Picrew! And I made the cover myself!

Cô gái văn chương book girl and the captive fool năm 2024

Scales *HIATUS*by TheRand0mWriter

Male!Naga OC's x Female!reader Getting accepted for your dream job as a caretaker at Mythical Labs was... well, your dream come true. You were extremely excited to be st...

Cô gái văn chương book girl and the captive fool năm 2024

Masquerade - Vampire AFby ⋇⋆Prince⋆⋇

•°. *࿐ In which the vampire clans meet for their centennial conclave, hoping to find their new leaders through a series of difficult trials. which candidates will come o...

Where to begin? I have often found that Japanese light novels, translated to English, can be much more of a 'love them or hate them' sort of thing. They are meant for a younger crowd (equal to young adult novels) and culturally speaking Japanese high schoolers are in a different league then their American counter-parts. So when reading a light novel series, set in a Japanese high school, a lot of readers are unable to understand the significance of something as small as being seen talking

with a younger classmate or seating next to a certain someone.

Suicidal Mime is a novel filled with despair and secrets. Konoha is a withdrawn, false sort of guy. He pastes a fake smile on his face, tries to keep people placated and inwardly is disgusted by his behavior. He wasn't always like this, but a tragic love in middle school coupled with a nervous breakdown from instant (and intense) celebrity has made him hard and brittle. He doesn't want the sort of responsibility that comes with loving someone or being loved. He keeps his relationships as shallow as possible.

Tohko, who other than her strange appetites is as normal as anyone else, is just as secretive and complex. Outwardly she is bubbly and bossy, pushing Konoha to keep writing her stories to devour and constantly hungry, but briefly you can see some truer feelings. The despair she feels over Konoha's continued isolation and withdrawal, her efforts to help others, the loneliness she feels. Her urgent need to help Chia Takeda at first seems entirely selfish, but over the course of the novel little remarks she makes or looks on her face reveal she has a deeper agenda.

One of the central themes of the book is a Japanese writer's work called No Longer Human. The author, Osamu Dazai led an infamous life, much of which is detailed in Suicidal Mime. No Longer Human is semi-autobiographical and said to be his 'suicide note' to the world. Its a dark, bitter memoir of one man's intense desire to connect with the world, but can't no matter what. He pretends at being human and feels ashamed of that. Two of the characters in the novel truly identify with the protagonist of No Longer Human, feeling cut off from the world and separate because they don't understand or because they feel immense guilt over not being as emotional as their peers.

This isn't necessarily a happy book, or a 'light' read. Suicide, love, betrayal, jealousy, death, redemption... this novel covers some hefty topics. The translation by Yen Press is excellent; it reads very smoothly. I can't attest to some of the pop culture references strewn throughout the novel (if they were changed to match American references or not), but those aren't a problem regardless. The biggest cultural reference that western readers may not get is Osamu Dazai and Tohko talks about him at length at one point.

As a sidenote I agree with Tohko's assessment that you shouldn't read No Longer Human if you are feeling any amount of depression or despair; even translated the novel is powerful and provoking. I prefer his short story collection entitled [b:Blue Bamboo: Japanese Tales of Fantasy|194739|Blue Bamboo Japanese Tales of Fantasy (Japan's Modern Writers Series)|Osamu Dazai|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1172591150s/194739.jpg|297542] available translated into English as part of Kodansha's 'Japan's Modern Writer's series.

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lexilewords | 3 reseñas más. | Dec 28, 2023 |

Cô gái văn chương book girl and the captive fool năm 2024

This is another very compelling volume in the series. Nomura seemd to be doing very well with pacing, slowly building up an overall dramatic arc between the stories, while telling complex self-contained stories based on particular Japanese classics. She relies on two conceits: the Book Girl herself, and the overt parallels between the story and its source, which are discussed thoroughly within the story - they're not subtle, they're a deliberate savouring and echoing of the old, and a fact

of the setting. Providing you're willing to accept these (not a big ask) they are excellent.

I personally preferred this to the previous volume, finding it much less problematic. While continuing to invoke mental illness as part of the stories, I found its manifestation here (obsession, destructive behaviour and self-harm) much more believable as part of a complex set of relationships between flawed people. The problems were self-evidently difficult to detect and to deal with, and it's not clear even to the reader exactly what could have been done when to keep things from spiralling as they did.

At the same time, Nomura spins a touching and compelling story of personal worries, complex relationships, and the general tumult of life that's very typical of adolescence but never really goes away. I was quite moved by it at several points.

That said, I'll highlight one issue that I've had throughout the stories - I often find I slightly lose track of what's actually happening, not in the immediate central story, but in the problems that the Book Club help with. The source material is often a bit intricate to begin with, there's a certain amount of (unnecessary?) authorial sleight-of-hand to help keep the mystery mysterious until the last, and characters fairly frequently turn out to have changed names for no very clear reason. Added to the fact that Japanese culture uses both first and last names alternately, the unfamiliarity of those names, and the way the main characters are always reflecting the behaviour of other (equally confusing) characters in some source novel or other... well, I tend to lose track of who people are.

Spoilers follow!

In this one, for example, we know there's a love triangle going on, and someone is obsessively destroying things. But Nomura always likes to pull bait-and-switch. Character A in the present seems to be Character B from ten years ago, but actually they're Character C (this, or something like it, always happens)! And the relationship of characters B and C in the past was actually just about the opposite of what was suggested (ditto). And Character A has changed their name from C to A for no apparent reason other than obfuscation, never explained in the story. And quite a lot of work has gone into trying to make sure you do get this wrong until it's explained. Also, everyone lies a lot to each other about what's going on.

Despite having just finished it, I don't think I could accurately sum up what *actually* happened over the years, and correctly separate this from what's very strongly implied to mislead you, what the characters say happened that isn't true, and things I just misunderstood. I do wonder whether the stories wouldn't be equally strong without this level of obfuscation, if Nomura would trust the reader to enjoy the mystery and character development without trying to keep it under wraps until the last minute, allowing them to know the truth before the protagonist twigs.

Sorry, explaining that took a lot of space, but it's not such a big complaint as it appears. These remain very enjoyable books and I look forward to the next.