The Executioner and Her Way of Life, Volume 2

September 13th, 2021

In Volume 1, we encountered a world in which “Lost Ones,” normal humans from Japan might find themselves saddled with “Pure Concepts,” magic too big, too unfettered, too uncontrollable for that world. In order to avoid monstrous calamity, there are Executioners who kill these Lost Ones. Executioners are not heroes, they are killers. Menou knows she is the villain of her story, but still strives to do her best in her job. In The Executioner and Her Way of Life, Volume 2, Menou is failing to do her job well.

The basic set up of the world is the typical three estates of the ancien regime – Nobles, Church, Commoners and the Knights who protect them. In this world (where media almost complete lacks of any kind, which I maintain is weird) the Fourth is a combined force of people who think this whole setup is ass and are trying to find power in the chaos. That’s the setup of the world, but it is almost irrelevant to the story, except as a background.

The actual story is that Akari is a Lost One with the pure concept of Time and therefore cannot be killed, despite Menou’s increasingly half-hearted attempts. Momo, Menou’s junior brings Menou important information almost having sacrificed herself to gain it. One of the worst calamities to strike this world, a Human Error, is free once again. And indeed, Menou encounters it…her. Akari is not strong enough to fight it, neither is Menou, but a concerted effort by Menou and “the Princess Knight” Ashuna (in a kind of Nobles-Church alliance) are able to bring her to a short-term standstill.  The battle, as one might expect from this series, is meant as an exercise in grossness and body horror.

At this point, I am now faced with the same choice I had in regards to Roll Over and Die. Do I keep going through what must be ever deepening levels of body horror and guro…and to what end? Will the payoff be enough for me to care? There are at least 4 more books in the series in Japan to date. Right now, I have no answer.

There are elements to this story that I genuinely like – primarily, the magic. The world is uninteresting and, sadly, so have the people been so far. The world is filled with that are mostly bad people, apparently.  We rarely, if ever, see someone decent, kind or even neutral. And here is where I find myself in a quandry. Some of those bad people are interesting, even if the book is at pains to present them as uninteresting. For instance, Manon’s backstory was to date the only fully realized story we’ve had. She’s initially presented as bored/boring, but turns out to have layers. Evil is presented in a way that works, but isn’t interesting in the same exact way Momo is uninteresting – monomanias are bad storytelling.  Ashuna and Momo present us with an avenue for growth and that interest me. And, ultimately, one might want Menou and Akari to have their stories filled in, since this is presented to us as the key plot of the series, around which all others revolve. But will it be enough to keep me engaged?

The worst element of this book is, without question, the art. I don’t know why it exists at all, honestly. Well yes, I do and it makes me want to punch someone. It serves one purpose, as the characters barely look different except to have increasingly insulting lack of underwear and clothing for costumes. It’s, frankly embarrassing that no one says, “No. Seriously, stop.” for “clothing” drawn in this fashion. The breast fetishism here is just…dull. Who is the front cover even supposed to be? It’s definitely not Menou (who wears blue,) Momo (pink hair, white robes,)  Manon (kimono and hair loosely bound at the bottom,) Ashuna (chainmail bikini and tall, with a lot of hair) or Akari (absurdly emphasized chest and black hair.)

Jenny McKeon does a pretty solid translation here, given that the overall tone with which this particular volume is written is “boredom.” And she makes the magic interesting to me, which is keeping me going. Since Yen does not credit anyone else, I’d just like to thank the rest of the team who made this volume possible.

Ratings:

Art – Atrocious and vulgar
Story – On the magic alone I’d give it a 9, but let’s temper it to an 8 for the grim
Characters – This one is still hard, let’s say, 7 with an upward creep.
Service – See art. Yes, I get it, it’s all very exciting that women have tits. /eyeroll/
Yuri – Everyone loves Menou.

Overall – 8

Yen was kind enough to provide me with a review PDF, thank you Yen Press, but I ended up buying the volume in print when I saw it in Kinokuniya. I am unlikely to keep this series on my shelves, but it actually looks really substantial and nicely put together as a print volume. It’ll go into a future Lucky Box. In the meantime, I’ll have some time to decide if I’m continuing as Volume 3 will hit shelves here in November.

5 Responses

  1. Megan says:

    The main strength of this series for me is the magic and worldbuilding – I’m interested to find out about the other ‘Calamities’ and the history of the world. The worldbuilding, with the isekai fantasy take on an almost post-apocalyptic setting, is the main thing keeping me coming back. Vol 2 wasn’t quite as strong as vol 1, but it had most of the same strengths (and weaknesses – the art and honestly I find Momo irritating) so I’m happy to continue with the series.

    The Yuri side of things is less prominent than I expected so far, though that’s not a flaw for me at this still early point in the story. With the way things are set up with Menou and Akari I expect there’ll be good emotional payoff further down the line.

    I can only hope the anime doesn’t take the LN’s lead with the art – in a LN you can mostly ignore it, but anime is a visual medium and I’d hate that to be anime viewers’ first impression. I read Roll Over vol 3 not long before reading this and the difference in the art was pretty stark. Otoh, the anime has the chance to visualise the fantasy scenes which the LN art completely misses out on in favour of more fanservice shots ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    • My expectation if that the fanservice and magic and body horror will take up all the frame space in the anime. I’m not really gassed for it. What I need to know is if the plot will actually be going somewhere that makes the time reading it worth it.

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