- Joined
- Nov 15, 2019
- Messages
- 44
@Pokari Your analysis is spot on.
Edit: Scratch that. I read the next couple of chapters in the novel. The character development was... let's just say it was anticlimactic.
Impossible grief - couldn't have said better myself - is what it looks like and I think they've done well portraying that kind of contradiction in her character. The fact that she has retained any sanity and ability to live and communicate in those circumstances is already a great feat. I haven't read the novel but I imagine it will take them a lot of time and character development to deal with all the grief and contradictions, and the conflict of whether they should be paying for the wrongs of their past lives or just get on with the present. I want to see this resolved, I want to see a future in which they are liberated from the past.The self-punishment never felt so much like a spirited condemnation of herself to me, as much as a way of coping with impossible grief. And also at the same time that her martyrdom has not given her a feeling of redemption, but rather, absolute assurance she's doing the right thing, allowing an implicit rejection of the premise that she is one of the villains even as she claims to acknowledge it—the things she tells herself (and as of very recently, others) don't necessarily seem to always be the things she really believes, just the things she needs to tell herself to make things work (bad coping mechanisms though they may be).
Edit: Scratch that. I read the next couple of chapters in the novel. The character development was... let's just say it was anticlimactic.