NEKOSOGI RADICAL
STATUS
COMPLETE
VOLUMES
3
RELEASE
November 8, 2005
CHAPTERS
24
DESCRIPTION
It may be true that where there is a beginning, there is an end, but it is too shortsighted to think that because there is an end, there must have been a beginning. In fact, the opposite is true. Most events have already ended even before they began, and they are closed even if they are not opened. I, a sincere and honest person who dares not speak truth as truth, dares not speak fact as fact, and knows the virtue of silence better than anyone else, will ascend a certain staircase in September. The Thirteenth Staircase. It was Kino-Raichi, Noise, Emoto Sonoki, Mio-tsukushi Takami, and Mio-tsukushi Misora. However, what awaits me at the top of the stairs is so ridiculous and so nostalgic… in this sixth installment of the "Zaregoto" series!
(Source: Kodansha, translated)
CAST
Ii
Jun Aikawa
Takashi Saitou
Magokoro Omokage
Tomo Kunagisa
Hitoshiki Zerozaki
Izumu Niounomiya
Akane Sonoyama
Miiko Asano
Kouta Ishimaru
Teruko Chiga
Houko Yamiguchi
Neon Suzunashi
Hikari Chiga
Moeta Ishinagi
Konomi Ichirizuka
Sonoki Emoto
Zukin Furuyari
Noise
Rurero Migishita
Jikoku Tokinomiya
Misora Miotsukushi
Nureginu Yamiguchi
Raichi Kino
Rabumi Katanashi
CHAPTERS
RELATED TO NEKOSOGI RADICAL
REVIEWS
AquaLucas2
100/100A Frustrating but Rewarding ExperienceContinue on AniListAt the time of writing this it's been about 9 hours since I finished Zaregoto. I turned the last page on my computer, read the last words, and silently looked at myself in the mirror with a sense of confusion. It was an off day so I spent some of it listening to Pharoah Sanders Karma (1969), watching a review of the latest Playstation showcase, going out with my friend to specifically get a shrimp burrito, all the while processing what Zaregoto would be to me now the final page was read, and the book series closed.
Honestly I kind of shot myself in the foot getting into this series in the first place because I saw it at Barnes and Nobles and found myself enjoying the first novel, buying the next 2, only to realize that the following 6 weren't licensed and I'd have to go through the hell of E-readers and fan translations when a core appeal of owning the novels was the physical artwork. Staring at my white computer screen for hours unironically gave me headaches, and completing the series was a long and often tiring process, and I even felt a sense of relief that I didn't have to open up Calibre again to read some more of Nisio's ridiculousness.
Despite all my gripes I find Zaregoto to be one of the more interesting series I've completed within my time in anime/manga/LN fandom, one that will definitely evolve and change and my ever evolving perspective on life, that changes experiences with media that get warped by it's nostalgia tinted glasses. I think that's a worthwhile paycheck after a 4 month slog, I'll at least give myself a pat on the back in this review (and real life).
I'll probably say it right now but this review is intended for people that have actually completed Zaregoto, it probably won't have spoilers, but if you actually want to read Zaregoto then just go to Decapitation: Kubikiri Cycle entry and read the reviews there, they're great primers.
What is Zaregoto?
Zaregoto is the debut novel series by author NisiOisin, who's trademark style has been codified by works like the Monogatari series, Katanagatari and Medaka Box. The work came in at a time when independent writers inspired by anime media began to create works for an insular crowd of like minded otaku (Think Kouhei Kadono, Ryukishi07, Type-Moon, ect). In spite of being just one ship out of many that rose from this tide, Zaregoto was beloved at it's time enough to get a western release at the time when few light novels ever touched foreign shores.
And it sold horribly.
Chalk it up to poor exposure or Nisio's eccentric style, people were just not interested in this japanese pulp fiction when they could just turn on Haruhi and see cute girls dance while also getting they're auteur self awareness fix. Still you can find a scant few blog posts writing about this weird light novel that had some Shinji inspired led, twisting that honkaku style mystery story structure. A small cult following was created from the second book, where the nonsense user starts showing his true colors. But it took a while before book 3 ever arrived.
Flash forward to 2020, the Monogatari anime series has wrapped up after a 90ish episode run over about 10 years, Katanagatari has had it's own anime by studio white fox (steins;gate, re;zero, ect), both of which have COMPLETE NOVEL BOXSETS, NisiOisin has become a household writer's name even outside anime circles, and Zaregoto get's it's 3rd volume after Vertical tries to resurrect the series.
And it sold horribly.
I find all of this to be kind of a funny but tragic story of the book series that couldn't, and it truly is sad that Zaregoto never got to spread it's wings even when both creators attached went on to have illustrious career in spite of it, like it's meaning never matter in the first place but to be moved on from to greener pastures (for reference, Take went on to create illustrations for the Pokemon mainline series of games, so make that what you will). All that's left is a dedicated series of fan translators and about 500,000 english words of Hitoshiki X Iichan fanfiction written on a couple PDFs.
So with all that said, why read Zaregoto? Why come back to this forgotten tale from the past? Why go through the trouble of reading fan translated nonsense on a computer screen when you could just go to your book box and pick up something easier?
Ignoring hipster cred, the main appeal was the evolution of the main narrator told through a truly nonsensical story who's perspective and literary style melts your brain into a puddle before hitting you with some genuinely heartfelt introspective moments. A rejection of narrative driven fatalism and an acceptance of adult responsibility (Iichan is 19, literally my age), coincided with the regaining of humanity for a boy who lost his soul years, maybe even decades ago.
After the events in volume 6, Iichan easily made his way into my favorite characters, and his connection and interactions with the other characters always felt like the best parts of Nisio's other works. There were times earlier today when I thought about how Nisio weaved the story in a way that was planned from the start, until I remembered one of the more nonsensical aspects of the plot that reminded me that I was referring to Zaregoto, not Dostoevsky.
Ok, let's not joke around, Zaregoto is like really god damn stupid sometimes. There are killing names and cursing names and thirteen stairs and other nonsensical organizations, people just "go missing" then just show up 7 volumes later like nothing happened at all, humans who literally die in the narrative come back to life, humans that can't die (whatever the hell that means) conspicuously die, and Iichan has the capability to sustain a ridiculous amount of damage only to spend his time sitting in a hospital bed (a conically large amount of time in the story is just Iichan laying in a frickin hospital bed, another unfamiliar ceiling...), and the solutions to the murders of the first 5 volumes are so laughably nonsensical that it ruins and faith in the setting as some place within reality.
I mean, you know why this works, that same nonreality is transplanted into our view by Iichan, but his rejection of it leads him down a road of nihilism and isolation, until he realizes what he's lost and fights the nonsense of the world with his own nonsense, a fight he almost always loses in comically thick headed ways.
That's the thing about Iichan, he's not your smart ass Ayanokouji brooding type, that solves every mystery he sneaks his way into like some weird edgelord's power fantasy, he's a lot more like Hachiman, AKA stupid. He'll brute force his way into the narrative only to get himself into situations he has no reason being in, only for Aikawa or Hitoshiki to bail him out in the most laughably fun way possible. The best part about it, is that it's relatable.
You see I don't want to get too philosophical, but we're weak as people. We constantly hurt and see fault in others, lash out and miscommunicate, find meaning in lies when the truth of that matter exists somewhere without conscious consideration, and our own arrogance causes wars that lead to nothing but death and destruction. The nonsense of the world is something I've always been vaguely aware of, but Zaregoto brought it into view, how not caring about any of it is the path I might take.
Iichan knew this, the man telling us the story from volume one is a deeply, one might even say fundamentally broken, person who’s outlook turned out to be something I unfavorably took solace in. It’s easier to go through life like none of it will matter, whether in the end or ever at all, and groggily neglect the people that truly, from the bottom of their heart, care about you.
Whether through circumstance or coincidence, that person turned out to be Tomo Kunagisa, someone who would love and care for Iichan no matter what, but that isn’t enough for him. Whether that was by design or a freak accident, Iichan and the reader both know that Ii and Tomo have lost something, that they’re past had took with them something they move forward unwillingly without.
The Iichan from volume 9 is not that person anymore, he’s changed.
Or maybe he hasn’t. We could never know in full clarity the circumstance that brought Iichan to Wet Crow’s Feather island, but what I know for a fact is that Iichan ends the series in a way that I could find respectable. He didn’t end a single life, he didn’t take on some drastically new occupation, or move away from the people he’s been introduced to the story as being in community with, hell he didn’t even end up with any of the other girls I thought we’re much better fits for his personality (It’s ok, Asano is left open for people like me ;). He just so happened to come to a realization with his own personality, a straightforward, self reflective honesty that allowed him to realize what he wanted out of life.
The Zaregoto series was never really about any of the nonsense that fills up it’s contents, despite all of it being vaguely enjoyable as narrative fuel for speculation, what ends up remaining after the final page is a resolution to live my life in a way that accepts all the understanding with myself with the capability to wish for that which will bring me true happiness.
Or maybe it’s not, and it’s all just nonsense... but it doesn't really matter either way.
Faabz
90/100La fine di un viaggio di puro no sense.Continue on AniList_Zaregoto series - Nonsense series_ “Essentially, people live in one of two ways. Either they live in awareness of their own worthlessness, or they live in their awareness of the worthlessness of the world. Two ways. Either you allow your value to be absorbed by the world, or you chisel away at the world's value and make it your own. Which should take precedence, the value of the world your own value?”
Ci dovremmo chiedere il senso di questo titolo? Forse dovremmo lasciarlo alla lettura o forse... lasciarlo all'ambiguità stessa dell'opera.
Un lungo percorso protrattosi per più di un anno la lettura di questa serie, non sempre semplice fra il mio inglese e gli eventi narrati che a volte erano semplici descrizioni o momenti simil-SOL, senza dimenticare infiniti soliloqui con Ii-chan in un letto d'ospedale. (Gli piace dormire in ospedale, certi fetish...)
Zaregoto è un'opera che gira principalmente attorno al protagonista e alle sue introspezioni e dubbi esistenziali, cioé più che dubbi... oserei dire un menefreghismo spaziale, accompagnati da casi da risolvere, tutti molto variegati e strambi. Tutto quello che succede a Ii-chan fa da carburante innescando le sue riflessioni, mai banali.Il primo approccio con questa opera è stato tramite l'adattamento animato del primo volume: Decapitation - Kubikiri Cycle, un buon adattamento e stand alone che tralascia solo qualcosina, utile più ai possibili futuri lettori dei volumi successivi. Nonostante un rewatch vicino alla lettura del volume 1, quest'ultima non è risultata noiosa, ripetitiva e prolungata. Anzi, è stata una lettura rinfrescante che ha portato all'immediata lettura del volume 2.
In generale mi sono piaciuti tutti i volumi, alcuni meno ma perché facendo parte di Archi che coprivano più volumi, risultavano come introduzione e avevano uno sviluppo molto più lento, come può capitare spesso.
Non ho molto da dire di questa serie, nonostante abbia provato a ripensarci a mente fredda, ha uno sviluppo atipico con un finale molto particolare. Personalmente lo apprezzo, vedendo il percorso fatto.
Un po' un'opera che si relaziona al lettore facendo riflettere e ponendo dei dubbi direttamente.
Ognuno ha un ruolo nel mondo, chi più importante e chi meno, ma pur sempre indispensabile per completare quel puzzle. Può cambiare solo il proprio modo di affrontare il mondo e di come agire di conseguenza.
Ii-chan, all'inizio è molto passivo, un pesce che segue la corrente o il banco di pesci senza porsi dubbi, o meglio... evitando di affrontarli.
Col proseguire dell'opera si accorgerà che c'è una costante, la sua negligenza riguardo il suo ruolo nel mondo e l'agire porta sempre agli stessi risultati... Chi gli sta accanto viene sempre coinvolto in problemi che sembrano così distanti. Inevitabile. Il fato. Bisognerebbe fare qualcosa. Bisognerebbe...
Nonostante tutto Iichan rimane sempre sé stesso, qualsiasi cosa accada, così ligio ai suoi ideali. Pauroso.
L'unica cosa da fare è non scappare da quegli eventi, da quel destino e affrontarlo col meglio che si ha a disposizione.
I vari personaggi che si presentano ad ogni volume sono tutti particolari, strambi ma sempre fighi e interessanti.
Il cast è molto vasto, alcuni personaggi hanno avuto poco spazio e non abbastanza approfondimento, ma da quanto ho capito, Nisio non voleva finire esattamente così ma le tempistiche e gli spazi erano risicati.
Un personaggio sicuramente mi è rimasto un po' sprecato, viste le premesse che potevano presupporre sviluppi nel finale. Peccato, but that's it. Zaregoto è questo, cose messe lì, chissà perché, pensavi fossero importanti? e inveceee.
Personaggi che appaiono al primo volume e spariscono per altri sette volumi, personaggi onnipresenti, sicuramente non ce n'è UNO normale, tutti pazzi furiosi.Una pecca per un lettore, come me, di CotE sono le poche illustrazioni, quasi inesistenti che fanno da cover ai vari capitoli. So che anche in Monogatari non dovrebbero esserci illustrazioni e probabilmente è una prerogativa di Nisio ma certe scene... ad avere l'illustrazione durante la lettura sarebbe stata una goduria.
Alla fine è stata una gran bella lettura, Nisio affascina per i modi di narrare e con dei personaggi così strambi e criptici che è impossibile non esserne incuriositi. Non è per tutti perché a volte sembrava che ti stessero rifilando una megasupercazzola, forse è veramente così. :-)
Peccato che in giro sia difficile se non impossibile reperire le altre opere spin-off legate al clan Zerozaki o alle SS di Aikawa Jun, The humanity's strongest. Personaggi ben coperti ma che potrebbero avere altro da dire.
Non dimentichiamoci il volume 10 per l'anniversario, chissà se verrà mai tradotto.
Direi che siamo arrivati alla fine di questa review, non una delle mie migliori, mi sono un po' perso nello scrivere... sarà stata la brutta influenza di questa opera? What a nonsense!
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SCORE
- (4.15/5)
MORE INFO
Ended inNovember 8, 2005
Favorited by 206 Users