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- Jan 10, 2024
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Long text coming, hold on to something:
To put ourselves in context, let's remember this story is that of a boy who dropped out of school, depressed, unable to function in socially acceptable ways, unable to empathetically understand the feelings of others for him and towards him and unable to assertively communicate what he really thinks, feels and wants, which prevents him from understanding what "love" is or what it means, or what it feels like to really love someone.
We start with Kou who felt isolated, uncomfortable with his friends, with his mother, alone, indescribably alone in the middle of the night, and he happens to discover his way out next to a vending machine. Our main character is someone who considers falling in love with Nazuna just to continue escaping his overwhelming days. The love for Nazuna is converted into a bargaining chip to obtain the freedom of the night, to answer its call, on the other hand Nazuna is completely uninterested in the whole love thing, just wanting to be able to suck Kou's particularly tasty blood. We don't know that right away, but like our MC she is also indescribably lonely. Therefore, in the process the matter gets out of hand for borth of our dove heads and the whole deal changes, Nazuna, the means to an end is transformed into an end in itself because Kou has to learn to love before he can become a vampire.
And from there? From there we have chapters upon chapters of personal growth, of rediscovering friendship, loving, of making peace with others and with oneself, of recognizing our own mistakes in the enormous failures of others, thus understanding them and empathizing with others, learning to live with those deeply flawed things that make us human, ironic because it is a lesson that Kou learns with vampires.
It is also a story where the goal of becoming a vampire is truncated halfway, but it seems that Kou does not stay with Nazuna immediately neither, it is never that easy, that is life. Can we say that Kou did not grow up? On the other hand, in this very human vampire love story, even months later Kou continues to love Nazuna and wait for her, without gain involved, without the need to answer the call of the night anymore because the time for that is up. Kou, alone, is going to be the detective's assistant, maybe he has just discovered his calling in life, he has friends, he has the luxury of refusing to hang out with them, he sets boundaries, he is assertive, and he is about to enter the final years of his school life. He faces the night once again, only to find out, in his own words, that he's fine.
Maybe this manga has taught us again something that Camus already told us in Les Justes: “But that's love, giving everything, sacrificing everything without hope of return. […] At certain times I wonder if love is not something else, if it can stop being a monologue, and if there is not sometimes an answer.”
I want to believe that from impossible beings, Kou learned, I think that is also the meaning in the detective's growth arc, recognizing herself in these non-human beings, learning from them, seeing that sometimes they are more human than ourselves. The same goes for the immense act of love between Mahiru and Kiku. I think that will get a complex ending because love is complex, but after all, I think good things await Nazuna and Kou, but what if they don't? Well, as already I've said, there is not sometimes an answer.
Again, it has been a pleasure to share with you all, see you all for the last meeting.
To put ourselves in context, let's remember this story is that of a boy who dropped out of school, depressed, unable to function in socially acceptable ways, unable to empathetically understand the feelings of others for him and towards him and unable to assertively communicate what he really thinks, feels and wants, which prevents him from understanding what "love" is or what it means, or what it feels like to really love someone.
We start with Kou who felt isolated, uncomfortable with his friends, with his mother, alone, indescribably alone in the middle of the night, and he happens to discover his way out next to a vending machine. Our main character is someone who considers falling in love with Nazuna just to continue escaping his overwhelming days. The love for Nazuna is converted into a bargaining chip to obtain the freedom of the night, to answer its call, on the other hand Nazuna is completely uninterested in the whole love thing, just wanting to be able to suck Kou's particularly tasty blood. We don't know that right away, but like our MC she is also indescribably lonely. Therefore, in the process the matter gets out of hand for borth of our dove heads and the whole deal changes, Nazuna, the means to an end is transformed into an end in itself because Kou has to learn to love before he can become a vampire.
And from there? From there we have chapters upon chapters of personal growth, of rediscovering friendship, loving, of making peace with others and with oneself, of recognizing our own mistakes in the enormous failures of others, thus understanding them and empathizing with others, learning to live with those deeply flawed things that make us human, ironic because it is a lesson that Kou learns with vampires.
It is also a story where the goal of becoming a vampire is truncated halfway, but it seems that Kou does not stay with Nazuna immediately neither, it is never that easy, that is life. Can we say that Kou did not grow up? On the other hand, in this very human vampire love story, even months later Kou continues to love Nazuna and wait for her, without gain involved, without the need to answer the call of the night anymore because the time for that is up. Kou, alone, is going to be the detective's assistant, maybe he has just discovered his calling in life, he has friends, he has the luxury of refusing to hang out with them, he sets boundaries, he is assertive, and he is about to enter the final years of his school life. He faces the night once again, only to find out, in his own words, that he's fine.
Maybe this manga has taught us again something that Camus already told us in Les Justes: “But that's love, giving everything, sacrificing everything without hope of return. […] At certain times I wonder if love is not something else, if it can stop being a monologue, and if there is not sometimes an answer.”
I want to believe that from impossible beings, Kou learned, I think that is also the meaning in the detective's growth arc, recognizing herself in these non-human beings, learning from them, seeing that sometimes they are more human than ourselves. The same goes for the immense act of love between Mahiru and Kiku. I think that will get a complex ending because love is complex, but after all, I think good things await Nazuna and Kou, but what if they don't? Well, as already I've said, there is not sometimes an answer.
Again, it has been a pleasure to share with you all, see you all for the last meeting.
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