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åć®åćÆć Another Sideļ¼Earthbound
4
1
Finished
Jul 30, 2016
5.0/10
Average Review Score
0%
Recommend It
1
Reviews Worldwide
I am curious about light novels (a pretty uniquely Japanese thing which weād probably classify as young adult novels) so I thought Iād give this a go. This novel is a collection of side stories connected to the events of Your Name and as such doesnāt really tell a coherent story of its own. But thatās fine. I enjoyed the film and was curious to see what parts they expanded on. The film had a lot of room for expansion I thought, particularly in the early days. The bodyswapping story seemed ripe for all sorts of incidents surrounding their insertion into unknown yet preexisting socialconnections. And it didnāt last long enough to my mind. But here lies the mistake in my interest: this book by necessity follows movie continuity. All those interesting avenues to explore were alternate routes that the film could have taken. Which means that there is actually very little left for them to do with the concept beyond expand on the secondary characters. And so thatās what we get. The entire book takes place in Itomori. We get to hear from most of Mitsuhaās family (her sister and father) as well as her friend Teshi. All these stories basically say the same thing: Mitsuhaās acting weird; what should we do about it and how should we explain it? While it interesting to learn more of these peopleās backgrounds and characters, I donāt feel particularly thrilled by anything Iāve learned. It doesnāt help that it isnāt so much narrative as stream of consciousness thoughts. The first chapter is closer to what I expected this book to be. It tells the story of Taki in Mitsuhaās body trying to pass as her. The film was mainly experienced from her POV for the first half so we missed a lot of this stuff. But in truth, thereās nothing very interesting there. Taki likes feeling her breasts. What a revelation. He doesnāt know how to put on a bra. He struggles with the idea of avoiding conflict. Heās afraid of what sheāll do to him if he steps at all out of line. All of this stuff seems pretty obvious. And unimpressive. This is again the limits set by the film impeding any sort of creative expansion. I hadnāt realized before reading just how little there was left unexplored by the film. This book verges on spoiling the film by making it seem emptier than I thought it was. We saw literally everything of interest on screen and there was nothing worthwhile that we missed. Iām not exactly sad I read it, but Iām certain that Iāll never look at it again. It just doesnāt add enough to make it worthwhile.
The fabric of life twists, turns, comes together in strange shapes, splits and transforms, and reunites again. In one cord of that rich tapestry, Tokyo boy Taki Tachibana and rural Itomori girl Mitsuha Miyamizu wake up in each other's bodies as if they were dreaming of another life. While the phenomenon persists, the two 17-year-olds adapt to each other's lifestyle as they try to figure a way out of the situation. However, it is not just the two teenagers who have to deal with the unusual state of affairs. In particular, Mitsuha's friends and family find the girl's unusual behavior hard to fathom. To her friends, sister, grandmother, and even stray father, her brash conduct feels curiously celestial. When a meteor shower colors the night sky crimson during Itomori's autumn festival, a long-forgotten piece of the town's history is revealed, unraveling the entangled threads of fate. [Written by MAL Rewrite]