God bless the english translation. All the NTR, Rape and mind break fetish bs ive skimmed through were worth it just to find this gem. An anime adaptation of this with a more fleshed out story would be bliss on earth.
@G-PIt's so uncomfortably horny.
@CrusadeDanJust don't look into the authors pixiv/patreon/whatever, if you don't want to see how exactly the elf ended up in that terrible, initial state.
All the NTR, Rape and mind break fetish bs ive skimmed through were worth it just to find this gem.
what a time to be alive@gladiatorua
@G-P
@CrusadeDan
I'm not here to hate on The Apothecary. Giba-chan's art is gorgeous, and I quite enjoyed the story. The poor, ragged elf is as alluring as she is pitiful, and only the most hardened sadist would be unmoved by her plight. But this series is creepy as fuck.
It belongs to a niche genre of helplessness fetish romance aimed at male readers. In such stories, the female lead is reduced to the most pathetic state possible. This enhances her dependence on and, consequently, her devotion to the male lead, laying a fertile bed for the flowers of romance.
The question, then, is this:
What horrors do we, as male readers, wish to imagine that the female love/lust-object has been subjected to in bringing her to the desired state of perfect, abject, and completely dependent helplessness?
Here, we get to imagine that her body and spirit have been all but annihilated by years of hideous sexual abuse. She has no memory or sense of independent self. Sustained trauma has left her blind, quadriplegic, and near-catatonic at death's door. To drive the point home, we are told and reminded that she was raped and tortured to the point that her genitals were literally destroyed.
Personally, I found that this story provided more helplessness and origin trauma than I really need or want in a romantic fantasy. It's great that the nice apothecary found and healed the elf. It's great that they can now live happily ever after. But the nauseating shadow of what the author has subjected the character to - in order to enhance the reader's romantic investment in her plight - hangs over the whole story, corrupting its superficially "wholesome" charm.
8/10 despite the creep factor. The art's great, the story's short but feels complete (if a bit rushed at the end), and I always appreciate a happy ending.
eloquently articulated the neglected elephant in the story, even if a bit pretentious in prose; I rate your review a 10/10@gladiatorua
@G-P
@CrusadeDan
I'm not here to hate on The Apothecary. Giba-chan's art is gorgeous, and I quite enjoyed the story. The poor, ragged elf is as alluring as she is pitiful, and only the most hardened sadist would be unmoved by her plight. But this series is creepy as fuck.
It belongs to a niche genre of helplessness fetish romance aimed at male readers. In such stories, the female lead is reduced to the most pathetic state possible. This enhances her dependence on and, consequently, her devotion to the male lead, laying a fertile bed for the flowers of romance.
The question, then, is this:
To what horrors do we, as male readers, wish the female love/lust-object has been subjected in bringing her to the desired state of perfect, abject, and completely dependent helplessness?
Here, we get to imagine that her body and spirit have been all but annihilated by years of hideous sexual abuse. Elf-chan has no memory or sense of independent self. Sustained trauma has left her blind, quadriplegic, and near-catatonic at death's door. To drive the point home, we are told and reminded that she was raped and tortured to the point that her genitals were literally destroyed.
Personally, I found that this story provided a good deal more helplessness and origin trauma than I typically need or want in a romantic fantasy. It's great that the apothecary found and healed the elf. It's great that they can now live happily ever after. But the nauseating shadow of what the author has put the character through - in order to enhance our (the reader's) romantic investment - hangs a dark cloud over the tale, corrupting its superficially "wholesome" charm.
8/10 despite the creep factor. The art's wonderful, the story's short but feels complete (if a bit rushed at the end), and I always appreciate a happy ending.
Thanks, zoklev. I'd like to write less pretentiously, but it seems to be built-in ¯\(ツ)/¯eloquently articulated the neglected elephant in the story, even if a bit pretentious in prose; I rate your review a 10/10
perhaps...Thanks, zoklev. I'd like to write less pretentiously, but it seems to be built-in ¯\(ツ)/¯
Fwiw, the Zyugoya series I commented on (Divorced Crybaby Neighbor and Broken Childhood Friend) belong to the same niche subgenre, but are less creepy, esp the former. Perhaps because the mangaka is a woman?
Lol thank you for that. Now reading...reminds me of this title
@gladiatorua
@G-P
@CrusadeDan
I'm not here to hate on The Apothecary. Giba-chan's art is gorgeous, and I quite enjoyed the story. The poor, ragged elf is as alluring as she is pitiful, and only the most hardened sadist would be unmoved by her plight. But this series is creepy as fuck.
It belongs to a niche genre of helplessness fetish romance aimed at male readers. In such stories, the female lead is reduced to the most pathetic state possible. This enhances her dependence on and, consequently, her devotion to the male lead, laying a fertile bed for the flowers of romance.
The question, then, is this:
To what horrors do we, as male readers, wish the female love/lust-object has been subjected in bringing her to the desired state of perfect, abject, and completely dependent helplessness?
Here, we get to imagine that her body and spirit have been all but annihilated by years of hideous sexual abuse. Elf-chan has no memory or sense of independent self. Sustained trauma has left her blind, quadriplegic, and near-catatonic at death's door. To drive the point home, we are told and reminded that she was raped and tortured to the point that her genitals were literally destroyed.
Personally, I found that this story provided a good deal more helplessness and origin trauma than I typically need or want in a romantic fantasy. It's great that the apothecary found and healed the elf. It's great that they can now live happily ever after. But the nauseating shadow of what the author has put the character through - in order to enhance our (the reader's) romantic investment - hangs a dark cloud over the tale, corrupting its superficially "wholesome" charm.
8/10 despite the creep factor. The art's wonderful, the story's short but feels complete (if a bit rushed at the end), and I always appreciate a happy ending.