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oldwivestale 's review for:
The Girl Who Fell Beneath the Sea
by Axie Oh
everything was way to convenient. a conflict? don’t worry: mask, dai, and miki will be there to save mina, who also happen to be her ancestors, but she doesn’t know that because spirits can actually choose their forms. the storms won’t stop? there’s actually a magic pearl that you can wish on to make them stop that has never been mentioned before. someone forgot all their memories? theres a goddess for that who will give them their memories with barely any persuasion.
this book was so incredibly messy it felt like a first draft. the world building is lazy and boring and didn’t immerse me at all. the main character is boring, the male lead is boring, and their romance is even more boring. they have no chemistry, barely any interactions, and you’re meant to believe they’re soulmates. the supporting cast isn’t good either. each side character embodies one trait to make up their entire personality, and the friendships are even weaker than the romance.
this book has no fluidity, and was incredibly repetitive. mina would discover something new about the world, pursue it, get stopped by the imugi. repeat repeat repeat.
this book felt more like a sequence of events rather than a story, which us ironic since the art of storytelling is such a main point of this book.
this book was so incredibly messy it felt like a first draft. the world building is lazy and boring and didn’t immerse me at all. the main character is boring, the male lead is boring, and their romance is even more boring. they have no chemistry, barely any interactions, and you’re meant to believe they’re soulmates. the supporting cast isn’t good either. each side character embodies one trait to make up their entire personality, and the friendships are even weaker than the romance.
this book has no fluidity, and was incredibly repetitive. mina would discover something new about the world, pursue it, get stopped by the imugi. repeat repeat repeat.
this book felt more like a sequence of events rather than a story, which us ironic since the art of storytelling is such a main point of this book.