A review by kittykels
The Sword of Kaigen by M.L. Wang

challenging emotional inspiring reflective sad slow-paced

4.0

It's been a very long time since I've cried so much reading a book. I wanted to give more like 4 stars cause I had a few minor complaints (more technical than anything else) but the fact that I was so emotionally involved in this book convinced me to give a solid 5 stars. 

Edited to add:
There's another, bigger reason I considered giving 4 stars instead of 5 (I did end up altering my rating), but it contains ending spoilers. Read at your own risk. 

When I noticed I was getting to the 90% mark, I was concerned about how the book was going to end, especially knowing it's a standalone and not a series. The ending didn't feel like an ending, and I think we were left with way too many unanswered questions. 

The whole book was spent establishing a questionable and corrupt Empire and impending war. We follow characters and information that are seemingly going to challenge these things, yet nothing ever happens. The home of the main characters was devastated and they start to rebuild and the story ends after she reunites with her old love and tells him to go back home and maybe do some things. 

Maybe it's because in real life, war isn't resolved in such a short amount of time and therefore can't be in this story either, but it felt like a build up to nothing rather than like, commentary on war tragedy or something. I'm probably not explaining my thoughts well at all. But I've read books that focus on the tragedies of war and I've read books that have offered some kind of resolution to a war. This doesn't fit in with either of those types of stories. Maybe that's not necessarily a bad thing. Maybe that means this book offers something unique. However, I can't shake the feeling that all of the character development and story progression seemed a little pointless at the end with the blatant lack of closure/conflict resolution. 

Why learn about the empire or the Ranganese or the mysterious God figure or anyone that provides conflict if literally nothing is going to happen with them? I thought the battle that devastated Takayubi (50% into the book) was a precursor for some big final battle or standoff or SOMETHING, but literally nothing else of importance happened. The rest of the book was spent reflecting, rebuilding, and reuniting with Robin. Robin and Misaki find closure with their relationship, but the story itself never gets any kind of closure or suitable ending.


Don't get me wrong, this book is well written and I still recommend it. I will likely read it again someday. However, the ending (or lack of one) just doesn't sit well with me. It makes me feel disappointed. 

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