Japanese Reading Report: 19 October 2025
It's the end of an era. As of yesterday I've completed all graded work for my degree. Now I only need to wait for my graduation in December to formalise everything. Being free of scholarly obligations, one might think I'd have so much more time in the coming weeks and months, but well... the world has ways of keeping me busy.
- ファタモルガーナの館
- 暁のヨナ (第4-17話)
- キミと越えて恋になる (第1話)
- Pale Fire (Lines 894-999)
- To Kill a Mockingbird (Page 1-148)
ファタモルガーナの館
I made steady progress with the Fifth Door this week,
finishing it and just starting the Sixth Door.
As I suspected from the more grounded story this time around,
the Fifth Door gets into some pretty heavy territory that I
found quite compelling. Michel withdraws from Giselle, and in
an attempt to help Michel, Giselle enters his room. She finds
a painting of a woman with white hair (this detail is not really
returned to in this door but it has not been
lost on me) completely defaced by furious cuts. Michel enters
the room, assumes that Giselle is snooping around to cause
him harm, and then threatens her with a knife unless she coughs
up her secrets. Giselle is totally speechless. She
can hardly gasp out a word in response. That's when we observe
Giselle's memories and learn
a bit more about her life before working for Michel.
Giselle lived with her older sister and mother. In order to
help her sister fund her marriage, and in order to provide
for her mother, Giselle begun working for Michel's family.
Shortly after working there, Michel's father,
Antoine, started to take advantage of her compromised
position during the nights. Antoine was sexually and
physically abusive and even used knives to etch words
into Giselle's legs.
After Antoine's wife discovered his infidelity she
blamed Giselle, and an arrangement was made to send her
to work for Michel in exile.
So, yes, Giselle was hiding something from Michel, but it
wasn't malicious. She only wanted to protect him from the
cruelty of his own family. Her eagerness to involve herself
in Michel's life was an attempt to make the best of
a bad situation. But it still wasn't time for Michel to
know any of that yet. Speechless, Giselle fled the
house into the woods, collapsed, and fell unconscious.
The next chapter of this door was short and initially quite
hopeful. It
began with Giselle waking up in a nearby town. A villager
called Amédée found her and took her in. Life in the village
promised to be simple, hard work and Giselle decides it's
better than the alternatives, plus Amédée was so sweet to
her that she felt she had finally found a home. After a series of
cute and uplifting scenes, some dark clouds begun to gather.
Someone alerted local authorities to the
existence of the village and everyone was compelled to
toil even harder to make up for years of "tax" never
paid. One day, Giselle is dragged into the
town center under suspicion of theft. She's been
nothing but honest, so she's unable to confess to her
uncommitted crimes. To make things even worse,
Amédée leads her interrogation, breaking any sense of
trust she had developed towards him up to then. Amédée
and his crew are downright cruel, torturing her in
sickening ways to draw out a confession that can never
come. Eventually Giselle remembered something Michel
told her when she first showed up: if she was only
interested in fortune she could take the belongings of
the house and sell them. She passed the information
onto the villagers hoping that the promise of money
would be enough to save herself. Amédée and a group of
men dragged Giselle to the house, beat down
the door, and were confronted by a furious Michel.
Michel convinced the villagers that he would inflict a
death curse upon anyone who stepped any closer, and
instructed them to leave Giselle behind if they wanted to live.
Michel's fury was deflated by Giselle's self-flagellation
and hopelessness. They finally spoke for real—Michel promised
to just listen and believe Giselle—and Michel came to
realise his own failure to trust others. Michel is still
reticent to share his own story
when pressed. Either way, they make up and start to
enjoy a more normal life together for a while. The following
life scenes were pretty cute and advance time a fair bit—a little
over a year, I think. When spring came around for a second
time, Giselle revealed that she started to grow roses in
the garden but
only one ever bloomed. Michel picked the rose, placed it
in Giselle's hair and asked for the honour to paint
her. The following scene was full of nervous energy.
Giselle had trouble
expressing her happiness about being adored and Michel had
trouble being honest about why he was doing the adoring. After
some shy conversation Giselle blurted out that she liked
Michel. The relationship looked like it was about to reach the
next stage, but right when they were about to embrace,
Giselle had a flashback to when Antoine first pushed
himself on her. She recoiled and pushed Michel away.
Thankfully it doesn't take too much to try again. Michel was
given the opportunity to return Giselle's affection, which he
did, and their relationship sort of, finally, started, for real.
After a few pleasant scenes where the couple
shared a life together, the story reconnected with the
events of the Fourth Door. Men stormed the house aiming to
kill Michel and Giselle, the pair ran up the tower as a
last line of defence, and Michel somehow managed to engineer a
situation where Giselle life was spared at the cost of his own.
We returned to the maid in the present. She informed us that the next
story would bridge our understanding of her from the moment of
grief when Michel died until now. She opened
the Sixth Door (1099-????) which reveals a grieving Giselle
gripping at Michel's
bloodied robes. A purple butterfly approaches her and speaks,
offering her a faustian bargain.
暁のヨナ
Covered a fair bit of the story this week. Yona and Haku escape
to various encampments, towns, and cities. First is Haku's own
tribe. Haku's younger brother, Tae-Yeon, is very cute and Yona
fawns over him in a way that reminded me a lot of how Tohru
treats Momiji from Fruit's Basket. It made me wonder about the
history of this sort of relationship in fiction: a (usually)
non-sexual relationship between a female protagonist and a
prepubescent surrogate younger brother. Perhaps it comes without
the implications of a boy her age (sexual baggage)
or a blood relationship (familial expectations). Anyway, just
something I'll be observing in the future.
They're pursued closely by Suon's men who want to capture
Yona alive. Haku fights fiercely to protect Yona, suffering severe
injuries in the process. More fleeing, and they meet Yun and Ik-Su;
there's a cute backstory for them before they take Yun along for the
adventure.
Yona needs to collect a bunch of dragon boys for some
important reason, and that starts by meeting the White
Dragon, Kija. Kija has one big hand... which is an extremely
funny "ability" to me. Like, it seems to work out great for
him, but it's also just a big, strong hand.
I really like the dynamic between Kija and Haku. Both are infatuated
by Yona so they have a cute rivalry where they try to one-up
each other.
The next dragon is the Blue Dragon Shin-Ah. His backstory is
extremely sad but also quite cute. Shin-Ah's power comes from
his eyes, which is actually a liability because he's basically
incapable of
using it without risk to friends. He grew up "blind",
wearing a mask with no eye holes, to prevent misuse. In terms of
his personality, Shin-Ah kind of fits the shy, soft, strong
boy archetype.
There was a small diversion where we saw what Suon was up to, but
honestly I don't care that much. Instead the latest arc in Yona's
story has been the group's arrival to a port town.
They've vaguely met the
Green Dragon, a guy who can glide in the air. He's a real lady's
man, but he hasn't met Yona properly yet. I hope their chemistry
is fun.
キミと越えて恋になる
The first episode of this aired. It's kind of funny how I just
heard about it randomly and it suddenly became the one anime of the
season I was anticipating.
Well, I thought it was a pretty good first episode. It wasn't
very different to the manga, but I thought they
did a good job of translating both the cute and handsome parts of
Hidaka, so I guess that's a success. The anime medium
also gave me
a better sense of what the Beast village was like. In the
manga the still images gave me the impression that it was just like
any other part of Japan, but it has a bit of a western fantasy
aesthetic.
The episode ended at the exact moment that I decided I liked the
manga—the scene where Asaka and Hidaka get locked in the gym
storehouse together. It's very intense, though I think Hidaka's
tongue is a bit more confronting when animated.
Pale Fire
I finished Pale Fire. I thought the ending of Kinbote's commentary was quite fun, but the end of the poem didn't really do too much for me. I don't have too much to add except that the ending quite engaging. As an apology here is another nugget of wisdom I liked.
He lived too much in his library, too little among boys and youths. Writers should see the world, pluck its figs and peaches, and not keep constantly meditating in a tower of yellow ivory[...] (p. 224)
Ultimately I really liked the book. I think Charles Kinbote is a really fun character, and I like how well Nabokov wrote characters who withhold information strategically for their own benefit. There's just so much pleasure in every sentence, and that couldn't be more evident than when I read any other English prose. Speaking of which...
To Kill a Mockingbird
I started reading this book. My father actually wanted me to read
this and I found a nice second-hand copy that I've held onto for
a little while, so I figured it was as good a time as any.
I'll start by saying that I really like this; my only caveat is that
I don't feel my brain burn passionately as much reading this as it
does while reading Nabokov. With that caveat, let's discuss it
on its own merits.
I've never read a book set in the American South, and I think the
most enjoyable part of book for me is learning about the lives
of people at that specific place and time. Scout and Jem are great
point of view characters because they are still learning about the
world around them, and as we see Jem reach puberty we also see how
he separates himself from the "child world", leaving Scout behind.
The amount of casual and aggressive racism is also very prominent, of
course. I certainly don't think I'm perfect, but the ways
people are racist feels absurd to the point that I genuinely wonder
how anyone could hold such thoughts in their hearts. Maybe the
real tragedy is that anyone can given the right
circumstances. The book doesn't even suppose that things will
get better soon, though it seems quietly hopeful that, given
enough time, things will eventually improve.
Apart from the racial elements of the book, the stories within the
Maycomb neighbourhood are quite nice. Ms Rachel is a recurring
character that I always like to see, and Mrs Dubose is a grouch
whose death revealed the ways people in the town conceal their
suffering.