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radwaashraf 's review for:
Three Days of Happiness
by Sugaru Miaki
I liked the bleak concept: a guy finding a store where you could sell your lifespan, your health, or your time for a sum of money), and I also liked his bleak outlook on life. It wasn't very weird having read a lot of dark literature (it really brings to mind the manga "Oyasumi Pun Pun").
This is my first forray into the world of light novels/anime&manga-adjacent-novels, and I loved the sharp and witty writing style and how it's really meant to help ou visualize everything you read. It's not as intense as reading a novel, and yet it's not as light as reading a manga. I think it was missing a little bit of art (maybe something for every chapter). It got very philosophical at times, and the transitions were sometimes abrupt and sudden, so there wasn't a lot of time for it to develop.
I had an issue with how it really glorified suicide. You might look at it as a story that comples you to find value in every day and find value to your life, but it's apparant that that wasn't even the author's intention. It had a sweet undertone to it, with the relationship blossoming between Miyagi and Ksunoski, and I think I would love to see a film adaptation (there are some scenray here that I would love to see visualized). I might even be prompted to read the manga adaptation, since it's short.
This is my first forray into the world of light novels/anime&manga-adjacent-novels, and I loved the sharp and witty writing style and how it's really meant to help ou visualize everything you read. It's not as intense as reading a novel, and yet it's not as light as reading a manga. I think it was missing a little bit of art (maybe something for every chapter). It got very philosophical at times, and the transitions were sometimes abrupt and sudden, so there wasn't a lot of time for it to develop.
I had an issue with how it really glorified suicide. You might look at it as a story that comples you to find value in every day and find value to your life, but it's apparant that that wasn't even the author's intention. It had a sweet undertone to it, with the relationship blossoming between Miyagi and Ksunoski, and I think I would love to see a film adaptation (there are some scenray here that I would love to see visualized). I might even be prompted to read the manga adaptation, since it's short.