Book review. Robbery changes bodies.
So good that I wondered where I was. Why did I just translate it?
| Robbed, changed body
9 Points or ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
The story of "Narusé Junichi," a gentle-hearted young man who one day encountered some kind of brain transplant, and this was the first time in the world to succeed, but the truth is not that beautiful, because Junichi's behavior gradually changed like that of a different person, making Junichi think that he might be possessed by the owner of the brain, so Junichi had to find the owner of the brain, along with the decline of his behavior and thinking.
The plot / story is very good, very fun, not complicated, easy to read, easy to understand, scientific, psychological. At first I read the side of the brain transplant, but when I realized that a partial transplant was a little evil, I thought that I brought the whole brain in. What I really liked was to see the behavior of the Buddha's own thoughts that gradually regressed, distorted, or dominated by the other person.
A quick course of action is through Junichi or the hero directly, which makes clear the twisted thoughts, which makes you want to know what behavior to do next, and an equally interesting record of other people's views is inserted, because we will know what people around you think of the hero, making you read more and more enjoyable, not boring, read and stick to your hand. This is also quite short, but also want to be longer and more detailed.
It's hard to guess the content. We already know where the behavior is regressing, but what it's going to do, this one is really unpredictable, making many events quite peak, some wow, some wow, some to the point of being amazed, the abyss.
The ending is too unexpected. I don't know where to end or where to end it, but I'm a little rushed to the end. I want to be more thorough, but it still ends well in Master Kega's style.
Overall, very good, fun, easy to read, like psychology, but don't ask for science or rationality, because brain transplantation has not yet happened, or it is very difficult. In the book, the teacher took the idea of the teacher (do not know the theory?) that if successful, it will be more to play, which makes the early days disrupt me a lot. But after reading it for a while, if not all the transplants are enduring, it is very good. Wow, it is another book of the Keiko teacher on the shelf. Recommended.
Author: Higashino Keiko
Translator: Tinbhas Carnish
Publisher: Daifuku
Category: Translated Literature
# Psychological fiction # Thriller fiction # Robbing, changing bodies # Higashi no Kega # daifukupublishing





































































