I love it good story line and Mc already turn into the type of character I like to read about. Courage wise and self teach badass...this is worth reading...
The translation quality and updating stability 3/5 cuz I haven't read the translated novel yet, but the characters and background 5/5. I've read the raw version to chapter200+ it's actually quite good. He gets to learn ridiculous skills which are useful in the later part of the chapters. Etc. Fortune telling to predict future or ability to talk to animals causing a whole pack of dogs to help out in finding a kidnapped child. Definitely a must read, vote for this!
The most annoying mc I have ever seen. It was all fine at beginning when you come across his heaven defying talent but I think the choices he makes are really bad even after he had a century worth of life experience. This annoys me to no end.
I m at the initial chapters but I find this novel very interesting. There is a unique story development. But the writing quality is extremely poor and difficult to read. The character design seems ok. There was good stability of update a while back now it has been more than a month. Cannot comment on world background as I have not read more chapters
Highly recommend! The author is well versed with amazing wordplay, almost like poetry, that brings ambience to the story. Mysteries keep you reading along with the amazing power system.
Therefore, using the Handbook's limit for a short story of 15,000 words and Gardner's suggestion that a novella doesn't begin until the 30,000 word mark, I'm going to concern myself with these odd-duck works which fall in between 15,000 and 30,000 words -- according to my own painstaking calculations. I know these word counts mean very little to the typical reader, who will sense that a work is short or long or medium or very long or very short, but who won't think in terms of the actual number of words. So here are some commonly taught novels and a couple of frequently anthologized short stories: To Kill a Mockingbird (104,250 words), The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn(108,575), The Great Gatsby (47,104), Jane Eyre(191,500), "Bartleby, the Scrivener" (13,692), and "The Fall of the House of Usher" (6,710). In Gardner's novella range are books like Heart of Darkness (37,746) and Wide Sargasso Sea(45,499).
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