So, who of you crazy Uber-writing folks is responsible for this? 😅😍❤️
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@mainaruxnarumai12
So, who of you crazy Uber-writing folks is responsible for this? 😅😍❤️
Volume 2 da Novel original de Ghost Hunt (não revisado, por isso sujeito a erros) Volume 3 em andamento.
Volume 1 da novel original de Ghost Hunt em português. (não revisado)
I've been reflecting and I've come to the conclusion that Fuyumi Ono is really an author with a detestable principle. She never really finished Ghost Hunt. After all the revelations about Naru's past, she wrote a sequel told from an omniscient perspective and forgot about Mai's feelings. Mai was infatuated with Naru during almost every novel, until it was revealed that Naru of her dreams, the one who smiled at her was Naru's twin brother Eugene. She then stood as the question "Me or Gene?" Naru's question was rhetorical, because to him, it is true that Mai is in love with her brother as well as all the girls who knew her real personality. But what I find bad on Ono's part as an author is the lack of final construction for Ghost Hunt. She says that for her, Mai and Naru will eventually be together and that happy endings are not her perspective. I think it's fair that she as the author chooses whether or not to write a couple's concretization in her book, but the way she "abandoned" the series was deplorable. She never really removed from the readers' minds that it was not Gene the guy she loved. I think Ono's real intentions were to write a bit more about it, but the story went a whole different way than she'd hoped for, and Ghost Hunt gradually became uninteresting to her as the author. I read a post like this on a Japanese blog. Where the analyst judged the author's statement about not wanting to write an ending where Mai and Naru are together. And it's really to judge, since she used to spend several pages of her book with Mai talked about her feelings for Naru with Taka. They were nauseating conversations that did not add up at all. Nor were they relevant to the investigations. Taka was always tempted to make Mai confess her feelings for him. Those who read the original work, the novels, know that Naru liked Mai, the displays of concern and "affection" in the novels are much larger than in the manga. Outside of Mai, the only person for whom Naru showed his humanity, was his brother. So much so that in the sequel, he makes his feelings very clear for him. What I do not forgive is the fact that Mai is put in love with Eugene, it bothers me the fact that anyone reading the manga thinks she is a rough character who is in love with the soul of a guy she can not even touch. For Mai, Gene has always been a fantasy that she created from Naru. I also do not like the definitions about the personalities of the characters that appear in every volume of Ghost Hunt. Mai's definitions say, "She's secretly in love with Naru ... He just smiles like that in his dream." But Naru already smiled at her twice. Once in the well and another in the case of the Yasu-san school.
The scene of the Urado case is much better in the novel. The truth is that in the novel, Naru seems more "human" than in the manga. I think he's more sensitive. “Someone – I don’t know who – knocked my head (I think it should be Bou-san who would do something like that). Anyway I nodded first. I’m all right. I’ve already calmed down. Suddenly the scent of red tea wafted in. Hearing the sound of cutlery clattering, I lifted my head. Someone held a teacup in front of me. I was stunned. “You’re all right?” A voice without inflexion. Lifting my head, Naru was holding the cup out to me. He was wearing a pair of thin, grey, pajamas. I felt it was a rare sight, and I unconsciously calmed down. I gently accepted the cup. Yeah, I’m all right. My hands, too, had apparently stopped shaking. “I’m sorry, everyone. Thanks.” I took the cup and hung my head. Ayako gently patted my back. Naru just stood by the side; then gently let out a breath. And then “What happened?” He asked. After I quietly finished my piece, Yasuhara spoke in a low tone.”