By Heiseiowari and Noy. Released in Japan as “Tenseishitara Saikyou Shu-tachi ga Sumau Shima deshita. Kono Shima de Slow Life wo Tanoshimimasu” by SQEX Novel. Released in North America by J-Novel Club. Translated by Alex Castor.
This is another title I took a flyer on that surprised me. Well, I mean, relatively. There really isn’t a plot beat in this book that has not been carefully chosen to appeal to folks who like the familiar and cliched. At the start of the book, when our reincarnated hero gradually realizes he is in fact Superman, I was rolling my eyes a bit. It kept me going for about half the book by not really doing anything wrong (which is a low bar that many series fail to clear). I think it started to win me over around the time of the blond loli vampire – because of COURSE there’s a blonde loli vampire – who doesn’t drink blood but drinks tsundere instead. That is a really terrific joke. And as the book went on I realized that I just really liked the entire cast. They were nice folks. Just chilling on an island and not overworking themselves to death or dealing with workplace abuse. Gotta love it.
A Japanese salaryman working at a black company, Arata, finds he has died. You’d think it would be from overwork, but in reality he was accidentally killed by Aqua. (OK, it’s just a goddess who’s ditzy and kind of pathetic, but there’s nothing saying it’s NOT Aqua…) He’s burned out by dealing with people, so asks to be reincarnated on a remote island with “a healthy body”. What he gets is a near indestructible super body, as well as a cheat that lets him copy skills. What’s more, right after he arrives on the island he runs into a beautiful mage who’s washed up on the island searching for something, a happy young beastgirl and her gruff-but-kind adopted father, a dragongirl that falls for our hero at first punch, the aforementioned vampire, etc. Can this really be a slow life?
Though it does not get hot and heavy like Bladesmith did (it’s still platonic by the end of the volume), I was once again really won over by the relationship between the two leads in this book. As it turns out, Reina the mage is dealing with just as difficult a life as Arata had, and between the ludicrously hard training from her mentor and pressure from the kingdoms to marry into their family or else, she regards the island castaway life as a relief. She also finds that, unlike her old country where she was top mage dog and feared by all, here she’s the smallest fish in the pond. I joked about tsundere above, but that’s not really true, she’s just trying to deal with the fact that she’s been rescued by a handsome nice guy who can punch out top-tier monsters and also can learn magic much faster than she does. It’s no wonder by the end of the volume, they’ve built a house. With separate bedrooms, of course. For now. (They backtrack on that almost immediately, though it’s still platonic.)
The vibe for this book is friendly. Even the seeming antagonists end up being, at most, annoying teases. Turns out that a relaxing life among friends where you control your own destiny is therapeutic as hell.


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