Oh my god who is writing Ilic's monologues! And the dialogues!!
"Which God are you?"
(Is he the God of pervs?)
"The God of Slaves."
The monologues and dialogues in every chapter always have just the right balance of wit, mockery, treachery, subtlety, menacing, titillating and humor.
People can point and denounce the morality of this story that simply depicts the real hierarchy back in the medieval times and exactly how human life was seen as expendable in the past, as if that is somehow the principal criterion for narrative works when we have critically acclaimed works like "The Godfather" and "Pulp Fiction" with dark themes that are considered immoral, but they can't take away from the entertaining dialogue, art quality, and detail of the plot. This story is already quite soft in terms of moral overstep. Any more and these people won't be able to stomach this.. or stomach anything for that matter.
Oh my god who is writing Ilic's monologues! And the dialogues!!
"Which God are you?"
(Is he the God of pervs?)
"The God of Slaves."
The monologues and dialogues in every chapter always have just the right balance of wit, mockery, treachery, subtlety, menacing, titillating and humor.
People can point and denounce the morality of this story that simply depicts the real hierarchy back in the medieval times and exactly how human life was seen as expendable in the past, as if that is somehow the principal criterion for narrative works when we have critically acclaimed works like "The Godfather" and "Pulp Fiction" with dark themes that are considered immoral, but they can't take away from the entertaining dialogue, art quality, and detail of the plot. This story is already quite soft in terms of moral overstep. Any more and these people won't be able to stomach this.. or stomach anything for that matter.