2022-11-26 08:33
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<p>Meia is invited to a summer party by a man named Jean Monet. According to the letter, Mr Monet already knows her, but she herself does not remember him. She knows that the Monet family is one of the most powerful families in the country and would have no reason to bother with her. Meia has to accept the invitation because her father insists. Upon arrival, there are no other guests on site, only Mr. Monet. At first he is very nice to her, but then he suddenly has to go and she is left alone. She can do whatever she wants on the property. She learns from one of the maids that the family's older brother has recently died. She also learns that the father is probably very ill. Jean Monet would thus be the head of the family. Is it just a coincidence? Where exactly did Mr. Monet have to go? Why are the two maids behaving so strangely? And what is with the vines that seem to be undermining the entire property?</p> <p>Bellram: Is dark fantasy story with several books in light novel length. I dont want to reveal anymore about the story at this point.</p> <p>The Narrator (Little Help): I realised that it might be important to know one thing. There are a certain number of viewpoint characters and the narrator is always attached to one of them. He does not know anything that the character does not know. He tells everything that seems important to the character and explains everything that the character knows or finds out for himself. But everything can also be wrong. As an exaggerated example, if the text says: 'X was beautiful, wanted to pick up Y and said Z to her.', from another perspective it could also say: 'X is ugly, bends down and talks to himself.' Nevertheless, scenes usually only happen from one perspective. The narrator is also always on the character's side. As a small example for this, at one point it is described how old certain people are, but in doing so the age of the current character is conspicuously bypassed. This suggests that this is a sensitive topic for her, which she would bypass herself. How much you can trust a character is something you have to know for yourself. At a certain point there will be character sheets where there is also information about their personality. 'Honest, Realistic or Logical' is always a good sign. 'Arrogant or Overly-Confident', on the other hand, could indicate a bias. I would like to say, however, that with most characters and in most of the time, it is very obvious when the narrator is not telling the truth and what the hidden information is.</p> <p>The narrator (spolier): If the above help is not enough, then here is some more detailed example of what the difference to a normal book is. I'm really going to give something away and I already know it is true. So if you want to find out everything yourself, then you should not read any further. After all, no one explained it to me either. When Meia leaves her room at the beginning, the narrator mentions that you can see from the window when someone is at the front door, and that you can see through the banister when someone is coming up the stairs. In a normal book that would foreshadow that later on someone will come into the house and come up the stairs and she will see it. Maybe because someone is breaking in? Here, however, you should rather ask yourself why Meia is mentioning this.</p> <p>-This book is a translation by me Vikka. The original book is in German.-</p>
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