Foto dell'autore
11+ opere 137 membri 2 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Comprende i nomi: 澪亞, Reia Reia

Serie

Opere di Reia

Opere correlate

Accomplishments of the Duke's Daughter [Manga] 1 (2017) — Original Creator — 76 copie
Accomplishments of the Duke's Daughter [Manga] 2 (2018) — Original Creator — 56 copie
Accomplishments of the Duke's Daughter [Manga] 3 (2019) — Original Creator — 47 copie
Accomplishments of the Duke's Daughter [Manga] 4 (2019) — Original Creator — 42 copie
Accomplishments of the Duke's Daughter [Manga] 5 (2019) — Original Creator — 36 copie
Accomplishments of the Duke's Daughter [Manga] 7 (2020) — Original Creator — 34 copie
Accomplishments of the Duke's Daughter [Manga] 6 (2020) — Original Creator — 33 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Nome canonico
Reia
Altri nomi
澪亜

Utenti

Recensioni

I made the mistake of not reviewing this right after I finished it, so my memories are fuzzy. I figured it was best to finally write something up before starting the third book and further muddying my memories.

A couple years have passed since the beginning of the first book, and Iris is doing well. Her company is thriving, and she's doing a brilliant job governing Armelia. She's gone back to the palace for the first time since her fiance dumped her, to attend the Foundation Day celebration, and even that's gone relatively smoothly.

However, there's political unrest brewing, and Iris has shadowy opponents in high places who are setting her up to fail. Luckily for her, she still has quite a few friends and supporters, but will it be enough?

Like I said, I finished this a while ago and have since forgotten most of it. I had to flip through it to remind myself what had happened. It didn't help that the world of this series is the usual generic "sort of feudal Europe" that's practically interchangeable with the settings of many of the other light novels I've read.

Even though this wasn't the most memorable read, I did appreciate that things finally got a bit difficult for Iris. She'd made sweeping changes in Armelia with hardly a ripple in public opinion, beyond praise for how amazing a governor she was, so it was nice to finally have more conflict and obstacles in her way. That said, I thought things were dealt with awfully quickly and easily. Also, some of the emotional aspects seemed to come out of nowhere. The whole thing with her only depending on people up to a point didn't seem to fit with how she'd previously interacted with her friends and supporters.

I don't know how much longer I'll continue reading this series, but I at least have volume 3 in my possession. I hope the author doesn't plan to keep Iris in the dark about Dean's secret for too much longer, but I don't see how this series will manage to continue more than a volume or so past that revelation, unless the author plans to follow Iris as she turns the country into something as close to modern life as possible (but of course more perfect).

Extras:

Black and white illustrations throughout, a couple full-color illustrations (the cover art, plus character illustrations of Rudius, Gazell, Merellis, Louis, Berne, and Iris), a character list with black and white portraits, and a short afterword by the author.

(Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.)
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
Familiar_Diversions | Dec 18, 2021 |
Iris remembers her past life as a Japanese office lady at the worst possible moment, when it's too late to change anything. She knows that she has somehow been reborn as the villainess of the game You Are My Princess, and she's currently experiencing the climax of the route in which the heroine, Yuri, ends up with Prince Edward, Iris's former fiance. If things proceed as they do in the game, she'll be banished to a nunnery.

To her shock, however, that's not what happens. Instead, her father makes her the governor of Armelia, the family's domain, a task that would normally be given to the family's eldest son. Iris isn't sure why the story has changed, but she's more than willing to accept this fresh start being offered to her. And so begins Iris's efforts to improve Armelia's government and economy and make it a better place to live.

I've previously read the first volume of the manga adaptation of this series, and maybe a little of the second, although I never reviewed that one. The verdict: the light novel, like the manga, is at best so-so. I recall certain aspects being handled better in the manga than in the novel, but the light novel series seems to be capturing my attention more.

Although this technically starts off as a "reborn as the villainess of the otome game I was playing before I died" story, the otome game aspect is abandoned so quickly that in the end it doesn't matter. At most, it's a way for the author to handwave away all the problems with the world-building and all the things that Iris magically invents or knows about. And even so, the speed and ease with which Iris creates new products and institutes changes is difficult to believe.

The timeline is wonky - this book covers somewhere between 1 to 2.5 years of Iris's life. In that time, she founds a company (Azuta Corporation) that invents, produces, and sells chocolate, beauty products, tea, and children's books. She also improves Armelia's trade routes, reforms its tax system, creates this world's first bank, invents double-entry bookkeeping, founds the kingdom's first school for commoners, and begins working on plans for single payer healthcare (never mind that the school for commoners includes the first decent medical training that some of this world's doctors have ever had).

All of this is accomplished with ease and hardly any complaints from the merchant's guild, the aristocracy, the general population, etc. There are also only one or two moments in which people who've known Iris most of her life are astonished at what this young woman who'd previously never had much training in governance and economics is able to accomplish. This series may not have any magic in it, but oh yes, it is definitely fantasy.

It was clear that the author hadn't put much thought into the way people in a feudal society would likely react to the daughter of a duke suddenly instituting a bunch of capitalistic ideas. Or how a class system would affect the way characters talk to each other. Or how much time and effort it would take to invent chocolate, picture books, and conditioner in a world that had never heard of these things. Somehow Iris's workaholic office lady self vaguely remembered the steps for making chocolate from cocoa beans, and somehow her staff members were able to fill in any gaps in her knowledge and not be wildly curious about where she was getting all these ideas from. This book was constantly skimming the surface of big, sweeping changes, and everyone's response was just to comment on how wise and wonderful Iris was.

My eyes tended to glaze over whenever Iris asked for reports about how different things in her government and corporation were going - this didn't feel like edutainment so much as being bombarded with economic jargon and buzzwords. That said, I still somehow found this to be compulsively readable and plowed through it pretty quickly. I can't really explain it, since not much happened. I liked Iris's mother and grandfather. From what little I recall of the manga, it paid more attention to the backstories of Iris's servants but maybe less to the overall political situation. Prince Edward and Yuri sounded like a disaster, and the author was surprisingly obvious about the developments with Prince Alfred. There's a subplot that I suppose you could call "romance," except the author didn't bother with anything romantic - it's more "they get along and it would be good for them and everyone around them to end up together."

I am weirdly looking forward to reading the next volume. It's similar to the way I felt compelled to plow through multiple volumes of The Saint's Magic Power is Omnipotent, despite its many glaring issues.

Extras:

Two full-color illustrations (the cover image and portraits of Dean, Tanya, Moneda, Lyle, Dida, and Iris. Also, black-and-white illustrations throughout, and an afterword by the author.

(Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.)
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
Familiar_Diversions | Oct 30, 2021 |

Potrebbero anche piacerti

Autori correlati

Statistiche

Opere
11
Opere correlate
7
Utenti
137
Popolarità
#149,084
Voto
3.9
Recensioni
2
ISBN
13

Grafici & Tabelle