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Lädt ... My Next Life as a Villainess Light Novel 1von Satoru Yamaguchi
Keine Lädt ...
Melde dich bei LibraryThing an um herauszufinden, ob du dieses Buch mögen würdest. Keine aktuelle Diskussion zu diesem Buch. Pensaba encontrarme con una especie de Kirino Kousaka insoportable, una historia llena de gags sobre la probable personalidad explosiva de la protagonista. En su lugar, obtuve una historia de lo más wholesome, en donde la heroína no solo es sumamente madura para su edad (por motivos bastante evidentes), sino totalmente opuesta a los estándares de la realeza; y gracias a ello no solo mejora su vida sino la de las personas que la circundan. Una pena que esto solo se de en la prima donna y, en menor medida, en Anne, su sirvienta. El resto de los personajes son totalmente planos, aunque por ser el primer volúmen le otorgo el beneficio de la duda: al fin y al cabo, la protagonista reencarna en el universo de un juego otome, género totalmente arquetípico (por no decir lleno de clichés) si lo hay. Habrá que ver si esta tendencia continúa en los siguientes capítulos de la serie, o si se terminan de contagiar de la protagonista. Las tres estrellas son un voto de confianza. I've been really hesitant to read any of these iseikai titles. Maybe having studied Buddhism in Japan, it just comes across as unnecessarily provocative. Though I admit, I enjoy making light of writers like Haruki Murakami that think this is a form of high art. In any case, I had heard good things about this title and decided to check it out. Turns out I'm glad I did--it was really very amusing with surprising character work. I look forward to reading the rest. When Katarina is 8 years old, she bumps her head and suddenly recalls her past life as a 17-year-old girl in our world. What's more, she realizes that she is now living the life of the villainess in Fortune Lover, the otome game she was playing before she died. To her horror, she realizes that the Katarina of the game had absolutely no good endings. If the game's protagonist got a good ending, Katarina was usually exiled, and if she got a bad ending, Katarina was usually killed. Katarina would like very much not to die, so she comes up with new strategies to avert her bad endings each time she meets a person she recognizes from the game. What she doesn't realize is that she has managed to change the story enough that all these characters who were originally her enemies or neutral towards her now have begun to care for her. If all of this sounds familiar, it's probably because I recently read and reviewed the first volume of the manga adaptation of this series. Now that I've read this light novel, I can say that the manga was an even better adaptation than I realized. It managed to cover the events of this entire first novel without feeling rushed or overly confusing. It also neatly took care of one of this novel's biggest weaknesses: its repetition. This book really, really should have been written in the third person. Instead, the author opted to write parts of the story from Katarina's POV and then switch to the POV of (usually) whichever character from the game she'd just met, rehashing everything that just happened but with a few extra scenes, a more fleshed out backstory for the otome character, and all the subtext that Katarina missed or misinterpreted turned into text. While I appreciated some of this - the bit where Alan and Jeord talked to each other was great, Jeord and Nicol's reactions in a few parts were suddenly much easier to understand, and a few details came up that were basically my romance catnip - it resulted in a lot of repeated dialogue. It got to the point where I was skimming for actual new and useful content. The manga cut out all of the otome game character POV sections, except for maybe a few lines here and there, and trusted readers to use the clues in characters' body language and dialogue to figure out what had been left out. For the most part, it did an excellent job. Since I'd already read the manga, parts of this book felt like the "extended and bonus scenes" section of a DVD. Katarina's mother and father reconciled on-page (it was really pretty sweet), as opposed to the hasty and vague mention in the manga. And rather than having to guess that Mary I was surprised at how differently I felt about some of the characters in the manga vs. in the book. In the manga, Katarina was, hands down, my favorite character. In the book, my top favorites were Jeord (so amusingly frustrated with Katarina) and Mary (the scene where she verbally sparred with Jeord was fabulous). I also found that I liked Katarina's mother more in the manga. I'm really looking forward to reading the next volume, which should feature all-new content for me. I'm just crossing my fingers that it's less repetitive (please, Yamaguchi, don't spend the entire book showing us a scene and then repeating the same scene from a different character's POV) and a lot fewer uses of the word "abode." Translation-wise, it was smooth enough that I was able to finish the whole thing in less than 24 hours, but there were definitely some awkwardly phrased sentences and more typos than I expected. Extras: Several illustrations, an afterword written by the author, and an interview/Q&A with the translator (in which even the translator admitted "the repetition really does have a tendency to drive me insane" (150) - ouch). Rating: I probably shouldn't give this such a high rating considering how bad the writing was, but since it hooked me enough that I didn't want to stop reading, even though I technically already knew most of what was going to happen, eh, 4 stars it is. Consider it 4 "forgiving of enormous light novel flaws" stars. (Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.) Zeige 5 von 5 keine Rezensionen | Rezension hinzufügen
Gehört zur Reihe
Fantasy.
Humor (Fiction.)
Young Adult Fiction.
HTML: After hitting her head particularly hard one day, Duke Claes' daughter, Katarina, suddenly recalls all the memories of her past life: that of a teenage Japanese girl. Just before her untimely death, this girl recalls playing an otome game... that is exactly like the world she's living in now!She is now Katarina Claes, the antagonist of the otome game, who nastily hounded the protagonist until the end. Knowing all the possible outcomes of the game, she realizes that every single possible route ends with Katarina being murdered or exiled! In order to avoid these Catastrophic Bad Ends, she has to use her knowledge of the game and her own wiles, starting with breaking off this engagement with the prince...Will Katarina survive while making her way through this world, where bad flags trip at every turn? Find out in this reverse-harem rom-com, led by everybody's favorite villainess! .Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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A little repetitive and good bit of narrative summary in the secondary character POV scenes, but they nonetheless kept my interest, in part, because their tropes pulled on my heartstrings. In addition, the excellent narrative voice imitates the noblesse and yet maintains readability. Katerina's good-natured, resolute character and clever ideas pulled me in.
Sometime soon I'll buy the next one. ( )