By Iota Aiue and Tsukasa Kuga. Released in Japan as “Tensei Mofumofu Reijou no Mattari Ryouchi Kaikakuki: Cool na Onii-sama to Amaama Slow Life wo Tanoshindeimasu” by DRE Novels. Released in North America by J-Novel Heart. Translated by Raenoire.
This is one of those series that I was on the fence about till I saw that I had read the author before. They’ve done a very series over here, mostly for Cross Infinite World, and I’d enjoyed their previous series, Third Loop. Though honestly, I may have enjoyed this new one more if I had not read Third Loop, as it’s clearly trying to hit the same sort of themes and cuteness as that one. The author seems to dabble in popular genres, and clearly this one is dabbling in both the “I go back in time to fix things” stories as well as “fluffy things are wonderful and cute girls are cute” stories, which has gotten popular lately. This book does have a few interesting things that held by attention, but unfortunately it is also very by the book, with almost no actual surprises. It’s a “would you like that fastball right down the plate?” book.
We open with Lune Renard, the crown princess, about to get guillotined by a revolutionary mob, along with her adopted brother and father, who don’t seem to like her any more than the mob. She’s tried to help her family and their holdings, but has only made things worse, and now she’s being executed. She prays to the fox god who supposedly rules this domain… and he answers, sending her back in time to just before she was found in the temple as an orphan by her family. Can she make things right this time, and ensure she is NOT married off to a royal? Sure she can. After all, she now can not only speak to spirits, but she also has adorable fox ears and a tail. She never had the power of cute in her past life!
I did like a couple of things about this book. We’ve sometimes seen prisoners abused by the kingdom in previous books, but we’ve never really gotten a low-security prison for political criminals like we get here, complete with the “funny” eccentric doctor. (YMMV.) And I appreciated that it acknowledged the difference in status and how they’re treated with the commoner “hard labor” criminals. Also, while the crown prince showing up was as bratty and awful as you’d expect, he was actually more layered than I expected. He becomes a different type of awful once he realizes that Lune is valuable and can talk to spirits, but he still sees her as an object rather than a person, and thinks she should be grateful to be his concubine. (They’re both eight, by the way.) That said, when presented with evidence that he cannot really weasel his way out of, he manages to actually not be evil, even if this means, um, throwing allies under the bus. That said, most of this book is Lune being adorable, talking to her snarky god, and fixing things relatively easily as these sorts of books go.
And, as I noted, I’d read this once before, when it was called Third Loop. If you like fluff or defeating roundworm through the power of yoga, this is okay.
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