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Discussion, Resources, Roundtables, & Reviews

Features & Reviews

Banished from the Hero’s Party, I Decided to Live a Quiet Life in the Countryside, Vol. 14

August 28, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Zappon and Yasumo. Released in Japan as “Shin no Nakama ja Nai to Yuusha no Party wo Oidasaretanode, Henkyou de Slow Life Surukoto ni Shimashita” by Kadokawa Sneaker Bunko. Released in North America by Yen On. Translated by Dale DeLucia.

I admit I had sort of hoped that this volume would be entirely devoted to Red and Rit’s wedding, given the cover. And there are a few bits with everyone being really happy for them, getting the wedding dress made, etc. And yes, it does end with the wedding. But sadly this has always been a slow life series where the slow life struggles against the rest of the universe trying to drag everyone back into its troubles, and so the bulk of this book is trying to resolve the demons and God. That said, how it’s resolved ends up being pretty slow life in the end, as it’s just Red using… not his blessing, because that’s the whole point, but winning by being clever and strong. I am hoping, though, that this is the last we see of both sides of the conflict, and that the honeymoon volume (the final one) really is slow life.

A letter arrives from Yarandrala saying that she’s coming back to Zoltan. As such, Red and Rit realize that the time has finally come to set a date for their wedding. They’re try to keep the news quiet… which lasts about three seconds till everyone they know is screaming “they’re finally getting married?!?”. Unfortunately, there’s a nasty cold going around… or is it just a cold? Investigating, Red finds a mysterious plant near where the tomb they raided was. He also finds the demon lord and his aide, who Red and Rit have a long history with. We’re told that they’re trying to be heroes now, and certainly they’re saving villages and giving good advice about the sickness… but can they be trusted? And will Demis simply give up and let Ruti live her own life?

Demis has never been anyone’s favorite, and I think that applies to the readers as well as to the cast of the series. Here they possess a long-forgotten minor villain, Eremite, in order to make their point. Unfortunately for Demis, as with a lot of gods in fantasy series like this, they’ve long since lost the “I must help humanity because it’s the right thing to do” part of their godhood and are left with the “why does everyone not simply do exactly what I want them to?”. It feels thematically appropriate, if a bit pat (the fight goes ludicrously well) that Red is the one to defeat both Demis and Taraxon. On the bright side, this means the wedding happens (relatively) smoothly, without needing to worry about anyone’s blessing suddenly turning them evil. Best of all, Ruti allows Red and Rit to get married with not one single incestuous remark! Let’s hope it’s an excellent sign of maturity. Maybe she won’t even go on the honeymoon with them.

The next volume is the last, and honestly, this series has gone on a bit too long. But not to the point where I’m annoyed reading it. This was good.

Filed Under: banished from the hero's party, REVIEWS

Agents of the Four Seasons, Vol. 5

August 26, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Kana Akatsuki and Suoh. Released in Japan as “Shunka Shūtō Daikōsha” by Dengeki Bunko. Released in North America by Yen On. Translated by Sergio Avila.

After all the trauma of the first four, I noticed this one was a stand-alone volume, and I hoped that it might be a breather, a chance to relax and perhaps have a more lighthearted plot. And indeed the first half of this book fulfilled my wish. For the most part we have not had to deal with the supernatural person being in love with their minder in this series. Agents tend to love other agents, or other unrelated people. This also applies to the Archer of Twilight. Oh, sure, they are so ridiculously close to their minders that you can see the relationship as homoerotic (see my prior reviews regarding Hinagiku and Sakura), but we haven’t really had a romantic relationship until this book. Kaya is a teenager who is unable to deal with a crush, and her minder, Yuzuru, who clearly loves her deeply but is repressing it. The two of them push against each other, and get grumpy and sad, and it’s adorable. Well, until it isn’t.

Last time we met the Archer of Twilight, Kaguya, whose arrows brought about the night. The Archer of Dawn had a brief, minor appearance, but we get to know her here. After being chosen to be Archer, she was assigned a custodian, but he quickly found that walking up and down a mountain every day for years was too taxing for him. His son, however, Yuzuru, proved only too happy to step in and take care of Kaya. And now she’s in high school. She’s even able to go to an actual school, thanks to concessions from the organization behind all this. She’s a bit worried about Yuzuru, though, who’s so awesome and deserves so much better than staying with her his entire life. Even if she really wants him to, but is too shy to say so. And then there’s a landslide, and everything goes to hell.

While you can rest assured that the bad guys who want to control everyone and everything involved with the seasons and the day/night cycle are still here and still bad, I was rather surprised to find that they weren’t behind the natural disaster that leads off the second half of the book. Sometimes tragic stuff happens and it’s just because of natural causes. That said, the theme of this series is still present and correct. When Kaya makes the decision she does later in the book, she knows that she’s going to be punished for it. Everyone does, in fact, and other people are trying to take the punishment so she doesn’t have to. The best part of the book is when, in the epilogue, Kaya is told her punishment will end soon, she briefly feels it’s not nearly bad enough. Whereupon she’s told “You’re still in high school.” As these books go on, other people are bringing up over and over again what they are doing to children, and pushing back is becoming less a travesty and more a necessity.

We’re back to an arc next time, with more focus on Autumn, who played a major role in this book. Till then, this remains very well-written but also a bit worrying. These poor kids.

Filed Under: agents of the four seasons, REVIEWS

An Unruly Summon, Vol. 1

August 25, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Cathfach and Kurodeko. Released in North America by J-Novel Club.

This was one of the winners of the J-Novel Club original light novel contest, where they had judges (including Carlo Zen, author of The Saga of Tanya the Evil) picking out who created the best work. The winners got a cash prize, publication, and illustrations by a Japanese light novel artist (in this case, the Lady Bumpkin and Her Lord Villain artist). The premise of this story interested me, as it looked like it might be a deconstruction of the standard isekai. Which it is, but not as much as you’d expect. Honestly, this has its roots in those old fanfics where the author wrote the story asking “what if everything were the same except the main character was sensible and asked questions?” Thomas, the main character of this story, is sensible and definitely does ask questions, but that only gets him so far, because this is a world that has been at war for a while, and has summoned heroes before, and they are not happy they have to do it again. So they try to rig the game in their favor. This goes badly for almost everyone.

Thomas Smith is walking drunkenly back to his apartment with his friend Simon when he spots a purple “whirlwind” in front of him. On touching it, he ends up in another world. There, he is told that the world is under threat from demons who are on the verge of destroying humanity, and he has the power to help them fight back. He’s also assigned four pretty women – Stephanie, the King’s daughter; Christine, a knight; Wendy, a mage; and Mary, a slave. As he learns about magic and swordplay, and discovers that, much to his surprise, he really does seem to have heroic abilities, he also starts to connect the dots that they’re lying to him. In fact, the reader knows this from the start. Previous heroic summonings haven’t always gone well (and, in a nice meta joke, tend to be Japanese teenagers), so they gave him a “harem” and are trying to get him to be their good little puppet. The more he learns, however, the more everything completely goes off the rails.

This is a solid book, which wants to play around in the isekai sandbox but also try to examine some of its cliches. Slavery is examined closely here, and it’s horrifying in many ways. About 40% of the way into the book, we get a HOLY CRAP moment, and you wonder if that’s going to help solve the slavery thing, but that ends up not really being the case. Because this is a world where no one really understands how magic works. A lot of it is just “because it’s magic”. And Thomas finds that the success and failure of his spells lean a lot on his feelings towards others – even if they’re unconscious. Which means if he is unconsciously blaming others for their past horrible actions, even if he wants to save him the magic can simply not work. The world is also just starting to show off its complexity – it’s clearly meant to be multiple volumes, though I’m not sure how ongoing series work when it’s a contest winner. Possibly depends on sales.

I will admit, the character I most want to see more of in future books is the one who only appeared on the last page. So I would like to see more of this. For fans of isekai who want dark!gray!independent heroes.

Filed Under: an unruly summon, REVIEWS

Breathless Time Traveler

August 24, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Yuyuko Takemiya and Tsubasa Yamaguchi. Released in Japan as “Anata wa Koko de, Iki ga dekiru no?” by Shincho Bunko nex. Released in North America by Seven Seas. Translated by Alexandra Owen-Burns.

I must admit, in general I tend not too look too closely at Seven Seas’ one-volume light novels that they turn out quite a bit of, mostly as they tend to all look like they’re going to be “bittersweet, possibly tragic love story”. But this one they hooked me in on, because it’s by the author of Toradora!, a series I quite enjoy. Having read it, I found it well-written and compelling, despite the fact that, as I expected, it is exactly the genre that I said above. But that’s not all it is. This falls into the category of one of those books where you’re trying to figure out the plot, and you’re also trying to figure out if the characters are telling us the truth. And oh yes, it’s a time loop story, so we also have to pay attention to which timeline we might be in right now. It’s a bit of a mess. Kind of like our heroine.

We meet our heroine, Rara, dying on the side of the road after a fatal motorcycle accident. She’s able to give us an awful lot of first-person narration, despite an awful lot of grotesque imagery. (Folks bothered by motor vehicle accidents and their aftermath may want to skip this book). Oddly, we also see her sitting at a television, watching as an alien come to Earth announces that the world is going to end soon… and the alien is then killed. The same alien shows up in front of the dying Rara and explains that this world is created by her, and that she is the only one who can save it. She then finds herself back in time, at the point where she meets her lover. The alien is trying to get her to avoid this guy, or break up with him, or otherwise do something different so that she avoids dying in the accident. She, however, keeps doing the exact same thing. After all, she loves him.

So yeah, a little weird. Rara can be a bit dislikable at the start of the book, when she’s a furious teen ranting at (and seeking the approval of) her overly logical and punctilious mother. And as the book went on, I guessed one of the mysteries fairly quickly. But figuring things out is not really the reason to read this. This is a book about the joys of being in love, and that sometimes, when you’re deeply in love, you care about your partner a lot more than yourself. The title comes from Rara’s constant question to Kengo, “can you breathe? Are you breathing?”, which is connected to the fatal accident but also makes a very good metaphor for the stress of everyday life, and how everything can just be far too much. You can’t move forward or accept things. You stop breathing. In the end, Rara is able to get the happy ending she wants, but to do that, she has to accept that this happy ending is not going to involve her. And that’s fine. The one she loves is happy.

This was a bit depressing, out of necessity, but also had some very evocative imagery. I’m glad I read it.

Filed Under: breahtless time traveler, REVIEWS

Manga the Week of 8/27/25

August 22, 2025 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Ash Brown and Anna N Leave a Comment

SEAN: August is coming to an end, but if you think summer’s over I have some bad news for you.

ASH: Give it time.

SEAN: Airship has a number of print light novels. Survival in Another World with My Mistress! 8, Though I Am an Inept Villainess 9, Trapped in a Dating Sim: Otome Games Are Tough For Us, Too! 4, and The Weakest Tamer Began a Journey to Pick Up Trash 10.

For early digital we see She Professed Herself Pupil of the Wise Man 14 and Witch and Mercenary 4.

Dark Horse Comics has an 8th volume of Cat + Gamer.

Ghost Ship gives us 2.5 Dimensional Seduction 15, How to Build a Dungeon 10, Might As Well Cheat 10, and Yandere Dark Elf 3.

Inklore are debuting King’s Maker, a BL Korean webtoon. A rebellious prince is looking for an underling he can trust. And also more, I assume, given the genre.

ASH: Oh, probably. (I really should pick up something from Inklore at some point.)

SEAN: Ize Press debuts the novel version of Villains Are Destined to Die, about a woman who wakes up in the body of her favorite villainess, tries to change her fate, and discovers that she can only make “dialogue-tree” conversation choices.

And they also have The Perks of Being an S-Class Heroine 5 and The Villainess Turns the Hourglass 8 (the final volume).

A large amount of print from J-Novel Club. The Brilliant Healer’s New Life in the Shadows (Isshun de Chiryou shiteita no ni Yakudatazu to Tsuihousareta Tensai Chiyushi, Yami Healer to shite Tanoshiku Ikiru) has a young man who has (sigh) been kicked out of his adventuring party starts an underground healing clinic, and suddenly he’s the bee’s knees.

ASH: Is the clinic literally underground, illicit, or both?

SEAN: Campfire Cooking in Another World With My Absurd Skill (Tondemo Skill de Isekai Hourou Meshi) is getting a 3-volumes-in-1 omnibus. Its plot is its title.

Isekai Tensei: Recruited to Another World (Isekai Tensei no Boukensha) is the manga version of the light novel JNC has had for a while, and it runs in MAGCOMI.

Also in print: Ascendance of a Bookworm 32, the 6th Black Summoner manga, Gushing Over Magical Girls 2, Reborn to Master the Blade 7, and Tearmoon Empire 13.

ASH: Tearmoon Empire is another series I feel it need to catch up with sooner rather than later. (Also, yay, Bookworm!)

SEAN: J-Novel Club has three digital debuts. ATLAS: Her, the Combatant, and Him, the Hero was the grand prize winner of J-Novel Club’s first light novel contest. A man who can see the future and a woman who is fighting the system meet and fall in love in a cyberpunk dystopia.

ASH: Dystopia is a genre I read (in print, though).

SEAN: The Despicable Duke Settles His Affairs (Akugyaku Kizoku no Shinpenseiri) is the first in J-Novel Knight’s books, a new imprint focused on BL light novels. A man dies and wakes up as the villain in his favorite novel, a sadistic duke. Horrified by the Duke’s misdeeds now being reality, he vows to atone. Boy, this sounds an awful lot like a serious version of The Scum Villain’s Self-Saving System.

MICHELLE: It really does.

ASH: I missed the part where there’s a new BL imprint!

SEAN: An Unruly Summon is another J-Novel Club contest winner, of First Prize. A kingdom has had bad luck with summoning otherworlders, who tend to be socially progressive – the horror! The kingdom needs help, though, so he summons a guy and gives him a harem free of charge. Sadly, Thomas is not going to let any random king tell HIS what to do.

Also from J-Novel Club: The Diary of a Middle-Aged Sage’s Carefree Life in Another World 7, the 6th Duchess in the Attic manga, the 4th I Want to Escape from Princess Lessons manga, Isekai Tensei 11, Min-Maxing My TRPG Build in Another World 10, Revenge of the Soul Eater 2, and Three Cheats from Three Goddesses 2.

Kana has the third and final volume of Manhole.

Kodansha’s debut is an old one: AKIRA (Hardcover Collection), a reprint of the classic manga in the right-to-left format and with the original SFX. Made more Japanese for YOU, the picky reader. As for the story, does anyone need me to explain Akira?

MICHELLE: This is kind of tempting! Although I do have a fond memory of a panel in which a rat goes “Squee” from the previous editions.

ASH: That is delightful!

ANNA: New editions of Akira make me feel old, since I was around back when Marvel was releasing it colorized!

SEAN: Also in print: Ashita no Joe 3, Blue Lock 21, Nina the Starry Bride 11, Pupposites Attract 3, Senpai is an Otokonoko 2, and The Seven Deadly Sins: Four Knights of the Apocalypse 18.

ANNA: Always glad to see Nina the Starry Bride!

SEAN: And for digital we get And Yet, You Are So Sweet 11 and Gamaran: Shura 33.

MICHELLE: I should probably read And Yet.

SEAN: KUMA has a 4th volume of Happy Crappy Life.

ASH: Another series I’ve been meaning to read.

SEAN: One Peace Books has a 2nd volume of Detectives These Days Are Crazy!.

Three Seven Seas debuts. The Fed-Up Office Lady Wants to Serve the Villainess (Genkai OL-san wa Akuyaku Reijou-sama ni Tsukaetai) is a yuri series from Dokodemo Young Champion. After being laid off, a young officer worker is playing her favorite visual novel when she finds herself in the game! To avoid getting executed, she pretends her knowledge of the game is a psychic power, so now she serves the Villainess… who is hot!

ASH: But of course!

ANNA: Sometimes things work out that way.

SEAN: My Girlfriend is 8 Meters Tall (Chieri no Koi wa 8 Meter) is a Shonen Jump + series. A guy is startled when his childhood friend transfers into his class. He’s startled as she’s now 26 feet tall, which was not the case before. From what I hear this is a standard romcom except, well, that.

ASH: That would be rather startling.

ANNA: Seems like the logistics would be challenging.

SEAN: Natsume Wants to be Trained (Natsume-san wa Hirakaretai) is a BL series from Cheri +. A man who is bad in bed hires a male escort to teach him the ways of love… and finds the escort is his housekeeper!

ASH: Uh-oh!

SEAN: Also from Seven Seas: BASTARD 2, Black Night Parade 7, Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation: Mo Dao Zu Shi The Comic 10, Hitomi-chan is Shy With Strangers 11, How Do I Turn My Best Friend Into My Girlfriend? 4, and My Next Life as a Villainess 11.

And for danmei they have Dinghai Fusheng Records 2.

Steamship has a third volume of The Yakuza and His Omega.

One debut from Tokyopop: The Stranger in the Hoarding House (Gomi Yashiki no Kamakura-san). This from RED title is about a man who has shut himself off from the world, and thus let his apartment go to hell. Someone arrives to help him clean… but why are they there?

Yen On has two debuts. Witches Can’t Be Collared (Majo ni Kubiwa wa Tsukerarenai) stars a detective desperate for a desk job who now has to team up with an evil witch to catch an even eviller killer.

The World’s Strongest Witch: I’m Starting My Free Life in a World Where Only I Can See the Online Strategy Guide (Sekai Saikyou no Majo, Hajimemashita: Watashi dake “Kouryaku Site” wo Mireru Sekai de Jiyuu ni Ikimasu) is another of those “your magic skill is weak so we’re disowning you” series. Her magic skill turns out to be “I can see this world’s wiki page”. That can be really strong!

ASH: It’s apparently witch week for Yen On!

ANNA: As a librarian I do enjoy it when information is a super power.

SEAN: Also from Yen On: Agents of the Four Seasons 5, Babel 4 (the final volume), Banished from the Hero’s Party, I Decided to Live a Quiet Life in the Countryside 14, and Magical Explorer 10.

Lots and lots of Yen Press. Common-Sense Monster (Futsuu to Bakemono) is a yuri title from Comic Marche. A socially awkward girl is bad at making friends. If only she could be more like her classmate who gets along with everyone… oh, and seems to eat people?

ASH: I was not expecting that particular turn.

ANNA: Does she get along with the people she eats?????

SEAN: The Demons Are Planning Something Good! (Ma no Monotachi wa Kuwadateru) is a shonen manga from Dra-Dra-Sharp#. It’s a comedy about the underlings of the demon lord trying to find ways to terrify adventurers.

Farewell, Daisy: Jun Mayuzuki Short Story Collection (Sayonara Daisy) is a collection of stories from the author of Kowloon Generic Romance.

MICHELLE: The gorgeous cover on this has utterly sold me.

ASH: Oh, this should be good!

ANNA: Curious about this!

SEAN: Futari Switch is a Monthly Shonen Magazine title about two childhood friends with hopeless crushes on other people. One day they swap bodies. Can they now go after their crushes? Or is dealing with being the opposite sex trouble enough? From the Prison School author.

ASH: I will admit to being intrigued. This could be really good or really bad.

SEAN: Hollow Regalia is the manga adaptation of the light novel Yen also releases. It runs in Dengeki Maoh.

Killed Again, Mr. Detective? (Mata Korosarete Shimatta no desu ne, Tantei-sama) is based on a light novel, and runs in Dra-Dra-Flat b. A boy detective wants to be like his father, but avoids serious cases… mostly as he has the ability to come back after he dies, and he’s been dying a LOT.

ASH: Ha! That’s fair.

SEAN: Kunon the Sorcerer Can See is the manga adaptation of the light novel Yen also releases. It runs in my nemesis, Monthly Comic Alive.

Mechanical Marie (Kikaiji Kake no Marie) is a shoujo title from LaLa. A boy is the heir to a giant conglomerate, so needs protection. Unfortunately, he HATES humans. Clearly the solution is a robot maid. Unfortunately for the maid, he loves robots. A bit too much.

MICHELLE: Oh dear. Well, if it’s shoujo perhaps it won’t be too skeevy.

ASH: Hmmm.

SEAN: Also from Yen Press: The 31st Consort 2, Agents of the Four Seasons: Dance of Spring 3, The Anemone Feels the Heat 2, Apocalypse Bringer Mynoghra 4, Assorted Entanglements 8, Be My Worst Nightmare! 3, Brunhild the Dragonslayer 3, Bungo Stray Dogs: The Official Comic Anthology 4, Chitose Is in the Ramune Bottle 7, Combatants Will Be Dispatched! 12 (the final volume), Death March to the Parallel World Rhapsody 17, Game of Familia 7, Helena and Mr. Big Bad Wolf 2 (the final volume?), I’ve Been Killing Slimes for 300 Years and Maxed Out My Level 15, If It’s You, I Might Try Falling in Love 2, In the Heavenly Prison, the Devil Enchants Me 2, Is It Wrong to Try to Pick Up Girls in a Dungeon? On the Side: Sword Oratoria 26, I’ll Become a Villainess Who Goes Down in History 3, Kakegurui Twin 15 (the final volume), Lycoris Recoil Official Comic Anthology: Reload, My Dear, Curse-Casting Vampiress 6, [Oshi no Ko] 11, Reincarnation Coliseum 2, Sacrificial Princess and the King of Beasts Heir: White Rabbit and the Prince of Beasts 2, Slasher Maidens 12, Spy Classroom 3rd Period 1 (the third arc), The War of Greedy Witches 3, Witch Life in a Micro Room 5 (the final volume), and With You, Our Love Will Make It Through 3.

MICHELLE: Dang! You weren’t kidding.

ASH: That was a lot of text.

ANNA: Indeed!

SEAN: Surprise Yen deluge! What are you buying?

Filed Under: FEATURES, manga the week of

A Late-Start Tamer’s Laid-Back Life, Vol. 13

August 21, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Yuu Tanaka and Nardack. Released in Japan as “Deokure Tamer no Sono Higurashi” by GC Novels. Released in North America by J-Novel Club. Translated by A.M. Cola.

Those readers who dislike the frequently seen characterization of a lead as “seems completely unaware of how good/loved/savvy he really is” will have, I assume, dropped this series after the first volume, since that’s entirely what it runs on. Even those of us who enjoy that sort of thing, though, may find this volume trying. We do get the usual share of Yuto trying various recipes and accidentally inventing something amazing, of course, but the back half of this book is taken up with a genuine raid boss fight, which everyone assumes (except Yuto) that he will take part in, and that everyone assumes (except Yuto) that he and his tamed monsters did the most to help win, and then all the NPCs assume (to Yuto’s shock) that he is their leader and the one who they should give all the cool new quests. He will never stop being astonished by this, and he will never stop immediately forgetting it within five minutes.

The first quarter of the book is mostly Yuto puttering around, figuring out you can get medicinal plants when they’ve been trapped in amber, etc. He then meets up with Akari, one of the front-liners he (and we) have not seen for some time. They’re trying to befriend yokai, which you can’t tame per se but you can summon after befriending them. They also (thanks to Yuto’s really high NPC favorability) find a beastgirl who leads them to a village of beastpeople… and a huge, raid-sized monster, which is blocking the way to the sea village they trade with. Realizing that this is likely the way to open the next level that everyone has been searching for, they quickly gather allies and prepare to fight. Though Yuto also makes sure to do those little wandering things he always does, and as such gets all the good info about defeating it.

There’s minimal Alyssa in this book, but that’s mostly a setup for a gag. When Yuto wants to discuss dyeing and miracle herbs, Alyssa is offline, so he goes to someone else in their group, Maple. (No, not that one.) At first she’s fairly blase about what he’s brought, but when she runs across a major find, she quickly explains that he can only speak to Alyssa about this. Sorry, sacrificial meat shield Quick Cat! Only you can overreact to Yuto’s ridiculousness. I was also amused, though a bit annoyed, at Yuto’s anger at the cute couple that’s making eyes at each other while he and Akari are investigating… especially since he’s walking next to a beautiful girl at the time! Yuto is presumable mid-20s, given he’s an a=office worker, and this series is not doing romance, but his occasional “not gay!” or “damn normies” personality quirks seem out of character compared to the rest of him.

So a fairly decent volume of this series, and it gives people what they want. Unless they want Yuto to gain animal traits, he’s said no to that.

Filed Under: late start tamer's laid back life, REVIEWS

Goodbye, Overtime! This Reincarnated Villainess Is Living for Her New Big Brother, Vol. 5

August 19, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Chidori Hama and Wan Hachipisu. Released in Japan as “Akuyaku Reijō, Brocon ni Job Change Shimasu” by Kadokawa Beans Bunko. Released in North America by J-Novel Heart. Translated by Rymane Tsouria.

There are quite a few villainess books where I would describe the plot as performative, but Goodbye Overtime really leans into that. Ekaterina admits that these are real people that she loves and not just characters in a game, and also admits that she’s likely derailed things so much that the whole “doom” part of the game is not going to happen. But the monster from Book 2 shook her, and she remains panicked that if she takes her eyes away from things for one moment, everything will get back on the rails. I was startled to hear that she even saved one of the minor villainesses from a previous book, getting her a job as a maid (and the villainess is actually doing it well!) because she sees it as an inevitable future for herself. Ekaterina is very bad at seeing herself as others see her, but she’s also bad at confessing why she’s worried. At some point I think she’ll have to admit the reincarnation.

It’s STILL summer vacation, and after all her adventures across the territory last time, Ekaterina is back next to her brother and hosting events at her domain’s castle. The special guest is Mikhail, the Crown Prince, so all the red carpets are being rolled out. Flora is also there, and rumors are flying. Rumors are also flying about Ekaterina herself, and those rumors might be a lot closer to reality than she knows. Let’s face it, Mikhail is in love with her, Flora is in love with her, Vladforen is in love with her… and she’s completely incapable of seeing any of this, something all her love interests already know. She only has eyes for her brother, and he for her. Though thankfully, it’s made a little more clear that this is not romantic or sexual.

In any case, there’s a party, where they reintroduce a traditional dance her grandmother had banned, and a hunting party, where women are allowed to hunt again as her grandmother had banned that. Really, we see more evidence that her grandmother is simply terrible, though we are also rewarded with the idea that her father may have loved her mother more than she thought. We also see her almost enter into a contract with fairies, which underlines what the other nobles are saying – she may be gorgeous, and brilliant, and a pioneer in business, but she is painfully naive, and one of these days someone will get her away from Alexei and bad things are going to happen. (This is the second book in a row where she’s been spirited away from her main, and I suspect Mina is stressing out about this.

If you think this review is short on substance, the book is also pretty light. On the bright side, we’re finally heading back to school next time, and hopefully we can advance the plot. Though, like Bakarina, this is a series that relies very heavily on romance not happening despite everyone mooning over the heroine.

Filed Under: goodbye overtime, REVIEWS

D-Genesis: Three Years after the Dungeons Appeared, Vol. 2

August 18, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By KONO Tsuranori and ttl. Released in Japan as “D Genesis: Dungeon ga Dekite 3-nen” by Enterbrain. Released in North America by J-Novel Club. Translated by JCT.

Probably my favorite thing about this series so far is how it’s content to just ignore all the obvious plots that people (and indeed a lot of the cast) expect to happen when there’s a series about dungeon diving and killing lots of monsters. This book does have a lot more dungeon diving than the first book, along with a few moments of peril, but for the most part no one is in danger and no one stresses. There is a lot of political wrangling behind the scenes, which our heroes ignore, with the exception of their liaison with the government, who they basically bring into the team full-time here. There is even a brief action sequence near the end, featuring Keigo literally putting Miyoshi under one arm and leaping out of danger. But that’s irrelevant, as what this book is really about is rambling conversations, nerd analysis, food, and cute puppers. Yes, they’re hellhounds. But they’re cute puppers!

Keigo and Miyoshi need to actually go further into the dungeon than slime level, and that means tricking themselves out with all the bells and whistles. They buy an RV and put metal plating all over it. There are multiple kinds of steel balls for Miyoshi to toss. So they should be pretty safe against most of the harder monsters the dungeon has to offer them. Miyoshi ends up taming found monsters who are basically black death shadows in the form of large dogs the size of her. She adores them. They are also very good at keeping her (and, reluctantly, Keigo) safe from assassins. Because the main reason they’re down there is to get another language comprehension orb, which will upset the balance of power in the world. As a result, almost everyone is watching them like a hawk. Well, Russia is trying to kill them.

Despite trying to avoid the politics, the end of this volume makes it clear that they can’t do that for much longer. Staying quiet and anonymous is very difficult with the information they manage to find out. Not that they won’t stop trying. It turns out the person who’s getting the language orb is a 14-year-old genius girl who will be locked away in the US and made to translate. She’s resigned herself to this, but Keigo emphasizes that she has he power to defy that fate and make her own life. Even though we find out that the dungeon can, if used (and abused) properly, give out infinite gold and infinite food, they are still doing their damndest to make sure no one knows who they are for the most part, and that they can still go to nice places and order really good booze. I hope that keeps up.

As with the first book, the more this fights just going from level to level and killing monsters, the more I enjoy it. For nerds who like to ramble.

Filed Under: d-genesis, REVIEWS

Bookshelf Briefs 8/17/25

August 17, 2025 by Ash Brown and Sean Gaffney Leave a Comment

ALTERNATIVE[SELF LINER NOTE] | By Chiaki Yagura | Manga Mavericks – As a new publisher, Manga Mavericks has entered the field with a strong selection of short indie works. ALTERNATIVE[SELF LINER NOTE] is among its initial releases, one that I was particularly drawn to as it takes for its subject matter music as a form of creative expression. The manga is a beautifully introspective work, following an alt-rock musician who is struggling with self-doubt. Her internal voice, ever-present in the manga, is constantly questioning what she is doing with her life. She can’t help but notice the successes of others—close friends as well as more famous individuals—and feel crushingly inadequate. It’s an incredibly authentic portrayal of artistic turmoil. ALTERNATIVE[SELF LINER NOTE] is the first original short by Yagura, who hopes that it “leaves an impression or resonates within your hearts.” I can absolutely say that it does and that I am very glad to have read it. – Ash Brown

Betrayed by the Hero, I Formed a MILF Party with His Mom!, Vol. 2 | By Ishino Yassan and Makoto Kuon | Ghost Ship – I had not really planned on reviewing more beyond the first volume of this series, but there was enough in this second one that I thought I might give it a try. First of all, I appreciated the fact that, despite their crappy actions towards him and general badness, our hero is not all that interested in revenge on the hero’s party—he just wants to move on. Admittedly, the moms may get revenge regardless. (We’re already seeing the classic “without him they turn out to be terrible” cliche.) As for mom #2, we don’t get cheating or a horrible husband; instead, we’re reminded that this weird world considers late thirties to be old age, so everything’s consensual. Still what it is, but better than expected. – Sean Gaffney

BONDS | By ZENZO | Manga Mavericks – I’m always excited to see another publisher starting to release print indie manga, but I was particularly interested in reading BONDS. I’m not familiar with ZENZO’s work, understandable as this is the creator’s first original manga, but I am familiar with the story. BONDS presents a brief episode from The Journey to the West, taking place soon after Goku joins the Buddhist priest Sanzo as his bodyguard. While there are differences, ZENZO’s version doesn’t stray far from the original. The resulting manga is an earnest and immensely enjoyable retelling. I love the character designs, especially Goku’s, as well as the expressiveness of the illustrations in general. Thematically the story focuses on bonds, both literal restraints and the figurative ties that bind people together. BONDS is a short, quickly paced manga, but ZENZO’s exploration of the developing relationship between Goku and Sanzo is excellent. I hope to read more of ZENZO’s work. – Ash Brown

Friday at the Atelier, Vol. 4 | By Sakura Hamada | Yen Press – There was only one thing that had to happen in this book. Ishihara has accepted his feelings and knows he wants to be with Tamaki, but she’s still not quite getting there. As it turns out, much of her life has been spent not thinking about her life, and just going on automatic pilot. But even though that’s helped get her through some mental issues (there’s a really good metaphorical shot of her working at her desk while next to an underwater shipwreck, thinking “I’m fine”), in order to move on she has to think, realize this is love, and that she does want to date Ishihara. All ends well, and I think this was just the right length. And we get a bit more of the beta couple, who don’t hook up but might soon. Weird fun. – Sean Gaffney

Medalist, Vol. 12 | By Tsurumaikada | Kodansha Comics We’ve seen that this series is first and foremost about the rivalry between Inori and Hikaru, but for the most part it’s obviously been from the Inori side of the fence. That changes in this volume, which spends 2/3 of its time on Hikaru leaving her team and transferring to Riley’s group… which will hopefully be good for her? Riley seemed eccentric last time; the artwork this time makes her seem a bit evil? Also, now it’s Hikaru’s turn to deal with the horror of skating first. As for Inori, the main thing we notice is that she’s kept up the intensity but lost a lot of the nerves. That’s a good thing, as she’ll really need to be amazing to get anywhere in this competition. One of the best manga out there, sports or otherwise. – Sean Gaffney

A Sign of Affection, Vol. 11 | By Suu Morishita | Kodansha Comics – After putting off the payoff for what seemed far too long, at least the manga is getting to Itsuomi’s backstory, why he’s so dedicated to traveling overseas, and what that travel really entails. It’s a terrific look at the social and economic inequality in this world, and how sometimes you can’t do anything to stop death and despair, especially when you’re just a kid. But it also is about not giving up and just thinking “that’s the way things are, I guess,” which feels entirely apropos lately. Yuki handles all of this pretty well, in fact. That said, we do still have one boiling plot tumor to lance, and it appears it’s coming in the next volume. Will Oushi stay friends, or cut himself off from his past completely? A nice volume. – Sean Gaffney

Tsumiki Ogami’s Not-So-Ordinary Life, Vol. 1 | By Miyu Morishita | Viz Media – Well, this was just freaking adorable. Tsumiki is a werewolf girl, in a world where all of a sudden mythological beasts went public, and they have started to be accepted into the world. That said, it’s still a work in progress. Tsumiki seems to have her life together a lot more than the indecisive Yutaka, who is human and trying to have a “high school debut” but failing. However, Tsumiki’s family worry about her trying too hard, and we see that there are a lot of issues to think about with non-humans in this world—even vampires who are seemingly smug and arrogant are putting on a front. All this plus a budding romcom. If you want another sweet Shonen Sunday romance, this is a great one. – Sean Gaffney

Wolf’s Daughter: A Werewolf’s Tale, Vol. 1 | By Yui Kodama | Seven Seas – I wasn’t sure what to think about this manga, which I mostly got as it runs in the magazine Flowers, which needs more love over here. Our heroine is a high school girl who feels adrift. Then one day she runs into a young man selling wine, who immediately knows what she doesn’t: she’s actually a wolf—and so is he. After trusting him just a bit too much (as is acknowledged throughout the volume—her adoptive parents are worried), she goes to meet his family and finally transforms—but she’s a GREY wolf. This is almost unheard of? What’s more, because this is a josei manga, there’s a rival for her affection. This is compelling, even though there’s a frisson of stranger danger to the whole thing. – Sean Gaffney

Filed Under: Bookshelf Briefs

The Wrong Way to Use Healing Magic, Vol. 1

August 17, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By KUROKATA and KeG. Released in Japan as “Chiyu Mahou no Machigatta Tsukaikata: Senjou wo Kakeru Kaifuku Youin” by MF Books. Released in North America by One Peace Books. Translated by Kristi Fernandez.

Last year I was at Anime NYC, and happened across the One Peace table. I admitted I had not reviewed any of their books, and asked which one they would recommend (not Shield Hero). This was the one they picked, so I picked up a copy. A year later, I’m about to head to Anime NYC again, and I felt, you know, I’d better read this or the conversation at the table’s going to be really awkward. The book did not really win me over from the start. Any time our main character starts a bo0ok by telling us how drab, generic and normal he is, I resist the urge to simply stop reading. As it turns out, though, there’s a few interesting ideas going on with this book, and by the time we’re one day into the fantasy world we know one thing for absolute certain: He is not remotely normal at all. That is a bald-faced lie.

Usato is (groan) An Ordinary High School Student (TM). One rainy day he runs into classmate and resident pretty boy Kazuki and student council president and perfect girl Suzune. Since someone took Usato’s umbrella, they walk with him … and suddenly a magical circle appears under them, and they’re summoned to another world to be heroes! Well, Kazuki and Suzune are summoned to be heroes. Usato was accidental. Kazuki has rare light magic! Suzune has powerful lightning magic! They decide to test Usato as well, because why not, and find… he has HEALING magic? Suddenly everyone in the throne room is terrified, and we soon find out why: Usato is abducted by an incredibly strong woman named Rose, who announces she’s going to be training him to be a healer! Of course, Rose’s training puts spartans to shame. What the heck is going on here?

This book knows exactly what genre it’s contrasting itself with. The king and his ministers are horrified and apologetic when Usato is accidentally summoned, and his isekai power turns out to be incredibly valuable. It’s the opposite of all those “useless power and thrown out of the castle with no money” books. Rose’s reason for the spartan training comes up near the end of the book, and it works psychologically. As does Usato’s dogged determination, as he finally gets a great opportunity to not just be some nebbish high school student. Best of all is Suzune, who turns out, once summoned, to be a massive otaku who had to hide it from everyone as she was a rich ojou-sama. Here she gets to live out her isekai fantasies, fire off cool final attacks with her lightning bolts, and flirt with the guy she likes. The last of these does not go well, alas, as Usato has Protagonist Syndrome, so thinks she’s kidding.

So I’m not incredibly sad I missed this when it came out – it is a very common genre, and I try not to read the standard ones unless they have a weird thing going on – but it was pleasant enough, and if I get a gap in my schedule I may read more. For isekai fans.

Filed Under: REVIEWS, wrong way to use healing magic

The Executioner and Her Way of Life: Wish Upon a Star, Pray to a Flower

August 16, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Mato Sato and nilitsu. Released in Japan as “Shokei Shoujo no Virgin Road” by GA Bunko. Released in North America by Yen On. Translated by Jenny McKeon.

Well, back to reality. After a volume where I actually managed to enjoy it from beginning to end, we’re back to business as usual for The Executioner and Her Way of Life. The first 40% or so of this book is absolutely dire, and I was once again wondering why I had not dropped the series. The difficulty is that most of the people who remain in the cast are profoundly unlikable and selfish, and it’s not fun to read about them. This is also a book whose plot synopsis can best be summed up as “everyone is ignoring everyone else’s feelings and desires for the sake of their own”. Now, frequently this is understandable. The color soldiers are looking for a new homeland, and worry that this will cause the humans to try to eradicate them. (Correctly.) And Menou’s grand plan for saving Akari amounts to “kill myself”, so it’s not surprising that Momo is not down with that. Everyone is, frankly, at the end of their tether, and it shows.

Menou, Maya, and Sahara have fled to the Mechanical Society with Abbie’s help, but Michele, Momo and Hooseyard are hot on their trail, and trying to work out a way to break in there. Menou’s goal is the Starseed, but things prove more complicated than expected when they discover that another one of the Four Evils, Gadou, is still alive. After dealing with the fact that Gadou has literal split personalities, Menou puts her plan into action, despite the fact that her memory has gotten so bad that she’s forgotten Flare, Momo, and everything else about her past. Momo, meanwhile, has an Akari-in-a-Box, and a plan to get Menou and Akari both back with their memories attached, but this plan sort of relies on killing Menou first. Just for a bit. A little killing.

This book really does get good in the second half, as everyone starts to fight for their lives and their goals, and realize that there’s no way that everyone can end this alive. Indeed, Menou’s self-hatred and death wish is about all that’s fueling her now, and it helps the reader to sympathize with Momo a great deal, even when she tries to solve a problem by taking Akari from her luggage and hurling her at Menou’s head. Momo and Akari still hate each other, for obvious reasons. That said, Momo’s plan wouldn’t have worked without Akari, so they can at least be grateful for that. By the end of this book, most of the cast are almost back to normal and we’re at the end of the arc. If only Ashuna were back in the series I’d be perfectly happy. (Monkey’s Paw twitches) Oh no…

So yeah, Ashuna is the cliffhanger, and I am no longer happy. I suspect in this world that runs on war, death, and genocide, a lot of other people aren’t going to be happy either. Still, at least with Menou and Akari back to normal, there’s potential for more yuri in Book 10. Recommended, but be prepared for the traditional slow start. Also, warning, this book contains Hooseyard, and she’s still really annoying.

Filed Under: executioner and her way of life, REVIEWS

Manga the Week of 8/20/25

August 14, 2025 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Anna N and Ash Brown Leave a Comment

SEAN: It’s time to play the music, it’s time to light the lights, it’s time to meet some manga.

ASH: I reflexively sang that to myself.

SEAN: Just one release from Yen Press, the 9th volume of The Girl I Saved on the Train Turned Out to Be My Childhood Friend.

No debuts from Viz, but we do see Battle Royale: Enforcers 4, Cosmos 2, Hirayasumi 6, Hunter x Hunter 3-in-1 3, Jujutsu Kaisen 27, Magilumiere Magical Girls Inc. 9, Mission: Yozakura Family 18, Rooster Fighter 8, Show-ha Shoten! 8, Snowball Earth 6, and The Way of the Househusband 14.

ASH: I really should get caught up with The Way of the Househusband.

SEAN: Tokyopop, shockingly, has a one-shot BL title debuting. The magazine is from RED as well, can you believe it? The Desert Butterfly Yearns to Be Caught (Sajou no Chou wa Torawaretai) stars the young prince of a desert country and his ex-slave/bodyguard. They like each other, but can’t be honest with each other.

ASH: That is shocking!

SEAN: We also get Confessions of a Shy Baker 5 and World’s End Blue Bird 4 (the final volume).

Titan Manga has Somali and the Forest Spirit 3.

SuBLime debuts A Man Who Defies the World of BL (Zettai BL ni Naru Sekai VS Zettai BL ni Naritakunai Otoko), which runs in Kurage Bunch. Our theoretically straight protagonist has just realized that he’s in a BL manga! And he has to comment on all the tropes he sees around him. This is a comedy, obviously, and much anticipated.

MICHELLE: Huh. I don’t usually love fourth-wall-breaking, but this could be potentially fun.

ANNA: It does sound amusing.

ASH: That it does.

SEAN: Steamship has a second volume of Adored By an Elite Officer and a third volume of Loving Moon Dog.

From Square Enix Manga we get Wandering Witch 6 and Wash It All Away 3.

Seven Seas time. Let’s begin with the danmei debut, My Husband and I Sleep in a Coffin. A “reclusive gay virgin” wakes up one day to find he’s in the body of a thousand-year-old corpse. What’s more, sleeping next to him is an immortal warrior obsessed with his dead lover… who is that same corpse.

MICHELLE: Hm.

ANNA: It might be too many corpses for me.

ASH: Granted, I think I prefer that they are both corpses…

SEAN: Also danmei: Ballad of Sword and Wine: Qiang Jin Jiu 5.

Lost in the Cloud is a manwha/webtoon about a guy who’s been snapping pictures of his crush… till he’s caught by his crush’s best friend! Blackmail ensues.

ASH: As it so often does in these cases.

SEAN: Sacrifice of My Manly Soul (Ore no Dankon ♡ Sacrifice) is a seinen title from Young Magazine Web. A boy who has to avoid debt by dressing as a girl and attending an all-girls’ school finds the entire student council are all doing the same thing.

ASH: Well, then!

SEAN: Also from Seven Seas: I Want to Escape from Princess Lessons 3, The Ideal Sponger Life 19, It Takes More Than a Pretty Face to Fall in Love 3, My Girlfriend’s Child 8, My New Boss Is Goofy 2, No Love Zone 4, Tiger and Dragon 4 (the final volume), The Too-Perfect Saint 3, and Yonoi Tsukihiko’s Happy Hell 3.

One Peace Books has The New Gate 15.

Kodansha time. My Instructor Won’t Yield (Chiba Kyoukan wa Nabikanai) is a new BL title. A kind driving instructor has all the girls after him, but he rebuffs them all. Then he has to teach the “school prince”, who is also secretly a manga artist.

MICHELLE: This looks kinda cute!

SEAN: Welcome to Demon School! Iruma-kun: IruMafia Edition (Mairimashita! Iruma-kun if – Episode of Mafia) is an AU spinoff asking what would happen if Iruma was a mafia member?

MICHELLE: Oh, dear.

SEAN: Also, out *this* week, as they updated their website after I went to press, is Mobile Suit Gundam: THE ORIGIN Deluxe 1. Which is a 900-page oversized behemoth.

ASH: Dang! The original release could do some legitimate physical damage, I can only image what this edition can do. (By the way, this series is excellent, in case anyone missed it the first time around.)

SEAN: We also see Go! Go! Loser Ranger! 14, Hozuki’s Coolheadedness 27, I See Your Face, Turned Away 4, Issak Omnibus 2, Noragami Omnibus 9 (the final volume), Rent-A-Girlfriend 32, Saving 80,000 Gold in Another World for My Retirement 12, and Shangri-La Frontier 18.

ASH: Right! I meant to read the first Issak omnibus!

SEAN: And the digital title is Matcha Made in Heaven 12.

Kana has Eden of Witches 4.

J-Novel Club has one print title, The Misfit of Demon King Academy 6.

A quiet week for JNC digitally. We get Black Summoner 21, Goodbye Overtime! 5, the 3rd manga volume of I Only Have Six Months to Live, So I’m Gonna Break the Curse with Light Magic or Die Trying, Knock Yourself Out! The Goddess Beat the Final Boss in the Tutorial, So Now I’m Free to Do Whatever 2, and A Late-Start Tamer’s Laid-Back Life 13.

Ize Press gives us A Business Proposal 10 (the final volume), Kill the Villainess 3, Murderous Lewellyn’s Candlelit Dinner 2, Solo Leveling 13, The Villainess Is a Marionette 2, and Unholy Blood 7.

Ghost Ship has Do You Like Big Girls? 7-8 and Please Go Home, Miss Akutsu! 9.

Airship gives us print books for Easygoing Territory Defense by the Optimistic Lord 5, I’m the Evil Lord of an Intergalactic Empire! 9, and Sword of the Demon Hunter 10.

The early digital debut is Breathless Time Traveler (Anata wa Koko de, Iki ga dekiru no?), a one-shot from the author of Toradora!. A college girl is killed in a traffic accident, but now finds herself time looping up to the moment of her death! Can she fix things?

ANNA: I’m curious about this!

ASH: I could be pretty easily be convinced to read it.

SEAN: Also in early digital: Drugstore in Another World 7.

Why do we always come here? To read manga. What are you buying?

Filed Under: FEATURES, manga the week of

Bofuri: I Don’t Want to Get Hurt, So I’ll Max Out My Defense, Vol. 16

August 14, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Yuumikan and KOIN. Released in Japan as “Itai no wa Iya nano de Bōgyoryoku ni Kyokufuri Shitai to Omoimasu” by Kadokawa Books. Released in North America by Yen On. Translated by Andrew Cunningham.

Bofuri is, in the end, a series about what goes on inside a VRMMO, and most readers are here to follow the fun antics of Maple and Sally. Now, there are real players involved here, Kaede and Risa, and we have seen them on occasion. But we rarely have a chance to be in their heads for more than a couple of pages before we’re back in the gaming world seeing Maple eat a giant lump of poison. The series began with a brief mention that Risa had tried to get Kaede into some other games, but nothing clicked till New World Online. This volume, however, very definitely says the end is near. And as a result, we’re getting a little (very little) background into Kaede and Risa. Which is good! But given it’s the real world, we may actually get some real-life drama in Bofuri, the anti-consequences series. As frankly, Risa is starting to get very desperate about gaming with Kaede as much as possible before it’s too late.

Last time I said there would be an after-event recap of some sort, but nope. We’re straight into more gaming, as everyone goes around clearing dungeons, battling new monsters, and preparing for the 10th stratum. When that’s finally revealed, it’s shown to be the previous nine floors all in one – each section is one of the prior floors. The goal here is to Kill The Demon Lord, so Maple and Sally and the rest of Maple Tree start investigating to figure out how to do that. And they want to do it fast, as Maple and Sally have made things clear at last: they’re going to be third-year high school students soon, which means the days of gaming for hours a day are gone forever. It’s time to start getting serious about college.

It’s been clear from a while ago, and is made more explicit here, that Sally wants to fight Maple in a PvP battle, but holds off as she knows Maple doesn’t enjoy those. Maple is aware of this, though, and as their deadline draws near she’s starting to dwell on it more. She has no trouble fighting (and destroying) Frederica, mind you, but Sally is different. Back in the real world, not only is Risa anxious about those halcyon days with Kaede ending forever, but there’s also implications about Kaede’s past. We’d guessed that they’d been friends since they were kids, which is mentioned here without any detail. But now we hear how much Maple has changed since starting New World Online, and that she had never been so excited or enjoyed herself so much before. I want to know more about this! What was pre-Bofuri Kaede like? Was she bullied? Was she introverted? What’s going on here? And is there anything besides her latent crush and possibly different colleges that is the reason Risa is so desperate to enjoy this time with Kaede while she can?

There’s so much story I want to know about, and we get more of it here than most other volumes. But there’s still very little of it. Trust me, if you want to see Maple create poison copies of herself that explode, you’re also in the right place. Next time, probably more grinding and investigation.

Filed Under: bofuri, REVIEWS

Engaging with the Plot: A Former Cat’s Attempt to Save Her Now Temporary Fiancé, Vol. 1

August 12, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Usagi Hoshimi and Qi234. Released in Japan as “Konyakusha-sama ni wa Unmei no Heroine ga Arawaremasu ga, Zantei Konyaku Life wo Mankitsushimasu! Anata no Noroi, Kiraware Akujo no Watashi ga Toicha Dame desu ka?” by Earth Star Luna. Released in North America by J-Novel Heart. Translated by Minna Lin.

It’s always dangerous when you’re making stew. When you have something that’s just “let’s throw as many common ingredients into the pot as we can, stir it up, and eat that for supper”. A lot of the time it just ends up being an ugly, overcomplicated mess. Sometimes, though, all the ingredients manage to coalesce into something really tasty. You wouldn’t dare call it original – the exact opposite – but the common muck ends up being just what you wanted. We get that here. This is a villainess story with a capital V, having all the trimmings, and yet it works because it doesn’t take itself remotely seriously (at times I wondered if it was actually trying to be a parody) and because it has a really good story to tell about love, and what happens to people who get it and people who don’t.

Stop me if you’ve heard this one before, but we open the book with our main character being dumped publicly by her fiance, the second prince. Lucille was well-meaning and did her princess lessons well, but she knew the princess didn’t love her and was trying much too hard to change that. Now she’s engaged to the “cursed marquess”. Felix. This causes her to pass out… and when she wakes up she has memories of her past… eight lives. Yes, this is her ninth life, but her first as a human. In the previous eight, she was a beloved pet cat of some of the most influential and powerful people in history. And what’s more, she has a prophecy, which shows her pissing off Felix, getting into dark magic, and being killed by the Saint who’ll be arriving in a year. Fortunately, with her past memories and her premonitions, she can change literally everything about this plot.

A lot of this just made me laugh. It’s always nice to see an isekai’d Japanese girl who’s part of the supporting cast rather than the lead – one of Lucille’s past owners was a reincarnator who loved her “smol” kitty. The second prince is a buffoon who cannot recognize that the beautiful woman in front of him is his ex-fiancee, just not wearing heavy makeup, and it just gets sillier and sillier as he rants. But there’s also some really good stuff here. Lucille, being an ex-cat, does not remotely worry about what anyone thinks of her and is very confident. And she’s surrounded by people who are filled with self-loathing or self-doubt, ranging from the cursed Marquess to her new friend Mary Hunt… erm, Alice Rohans, who suffers from being the normal one in a generation of geniuses, to her own father, who is caring but it comes out as uncaring. If there’s a weakness, it’s that the dialogue can seem a bit TOO overly elaborate. Sometimes these people speak as if they’re reading words off a page rather than being in the moment.

This has a second volume coming, which I assume will resolve the curse as well as the cliffhanger we saw. If you liked Lady Bumpkin, and you liked Bakarina, and wondered what would happen if you smashed them together, this is that book.

Filed Under: engaging with the plot, REVIEWS

Lacey Longs for Freedom: The Dawn Witch’s Low-Key Life after Defeating the Demon King, Vol. 3

August 11, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Hyogo Amagasa and Kyouichi. Released in Japan as “Akatsuki no Majo Lacey wa Jiyū ni Ikitai” by Overlap Novels f. Released in North America by J-Novel Heart. Translated by Amanogawa Tenri.

This one snuck up on me. I was sort of gently mocking the book as I went through the first half, which is very much on the “low-key life” part of the title. Lacey invents oven mitts. Lacey invents a camera. But then it turns out that all of this, as well as the previous two books, are important as Lacey is asked to come back to the capital. And, while there’s a lot of backsliding and introverted panicking, the difference between the Lacey of the start of the first book and the one we see in this volume is night and day. She’s an incredibly powerful witch, and everyone and their brother want to use her. But while she does want to bring the kingdom happiness, she also wants the privilege of choosing how she is used. And people are taking notice. Best of all, Lacey finally cottons on to what her feelings for Wayne actually are. She’s not quite ready to do anything yet, but the feelings are recognized.

Wayne shows up at the village again, and this time he’s here for a full month, though he doesn’t say why. We see Lacey helping Cedric, who turns out to have a daughter who is getting married, and he wants to bake something special for the wedding but can’t figure out what. After the wedding, discussion of how the kids are having trouble remembering what the dress looked like makes Lacey want to create photography, which she does through a wonderful series of trial and error and the help of her phoenix. Finally, though, Wayne reveals why he’s there. The princess (you know, the one who cheated with Lacey’s fiancee in Book 1) is getting married, but has locked herself in her room right before the wedding. The king is asking Lacey to help do something about that. But why is the princess there in the first place?

After getting a fairly typical “evil noble” in the last book, the most refreshing part of this one is seeing how it handles the prior antagonists. The King is mindboggled by how much Lacey has changed from just a year away from saving the world and being the Dawn Witch. Alicia, the princess, already fully regrets her philandering, but being married off to a foreign prince (who’s fine, at least) has her lonely and homesick before she even leaves. Heck, we even get a side story showing that Raymond, whose fault all of this really is, has gotten used to life on the farm where he’s been exiled too, and is even coming through with delicious vegetables. If there’s a weak spot in the series, it continues to be Wayne, who I sort of but not really wish would be found to have a dark side, or a secret he hasn’t revealed. He’s just this bland guy.

But we’re not here for him, we’re here for Lacey, and she’s fun. She also reminds me of Monica, so Silent Witch fans should also get this. The next volume, which should wrap the series up, is not out in Japan yet.

Filed Under: lacey longs for freedom, REVIEWS

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