What I absolutely love about the novel and adaptation is their ability to perfectly mix lighthearted absurdness with poignant and thought-provoking parts. One moment you're laughing at Yoojin's and his babies' antics, the next - you just sit there, with a heavy heart. The happier are the characters, the more painfully their grief and tears hit you.
But what's even more amazing is the story's subtle ways to show motives and emotions. That cheeky half-smile half-smirk, that slight shadow over the character's face, that awkward but necessary incompleteness of the dialogue, that warm light filling the character's eyes, that unspoken regret behind a certain S-class officer's face and his surprising indecisiveness. I can't stop reading each chapter over and over, savoring its art and dialogue. I also hope other fans too pay a lot of attention to the writers, artists and their amazing work)
What I absolutely love about the novel and adaptation is their ability to perfectly mix lighthearted absurdness with poignant and thought-provoking parts. One moment you're laughing at Yoojin's and his babies' antics, the next - you just sit there, with a heavy heart. The happier are the characters, the more painfully their grief and tears hit you.
But what's even more amazing is the story's subtle ways to show motives and emotions. That cheeky half-smile half-smirk, that slight shadow over the character's face, that awkward but necessary incompleteness of the dialogue, that warm light filling the character's eyes, that unspoken regret behind a certain S-class officer's face and his surprising indecisiveness.
I can't stop reading each chapter over and over, savoring its art and dialogue. I also hope other fans too pay a lot of attention to the writers, artists and their amazing work)