Category Archives: blessing of liefe

The Blessing of Liefe: Leave This Magical Letdown Alone!, Vol. 2

By Kureha and Yoko Matsurika. Released in Japan as “Liefe no Shukufuku: Muzokusei Mahō Shika Tsukaenai Ochikobore toshite Hottoite Kudasai” by Arian Rose. Released in North America by J-Novel Heart. Translated by Alex Castor.

In my review of the first volume I marveled at the fact that our heroine had, helping her out and in her corner, about 90% of the important and powerful people in the kingdom, which sort of made this story about an abused child even more Cinderella than those stories usually are. This volume tries to show us that there’s a reason that she needs all that support and protection. The volume begins with a flashback to the tournament she did in middle school, where we hear she simply never bothered to show up for the semifinals. Now here we see why – she’s been threatened, and it does not take a genius to figure out who has enough emotional hold over her to get her to change the entire way she’s been living to date. As such, the resolution of the confession she got in the first book is obvious. It’s hard to agree to a romantic love with the prince when you have PTSD.

So yes, as I hinted above, Yui ends up rejecting Prince Filiel’s proposal. Everyone then heads off to the training camp for strong fighters, which also has Yui and her passel of first-year prodigies along for the ride, much to the disgust of some of the other students. This disgust is not helped by Yui’s attitude throughout the entire training camp. She skips out on all the training, doesn’t care about anything but sweets, and when forced to fight, puts up a defensive wall and starts to read a book. About sweets. She’s always been fairly blase and nonchalant about things, but it’s getting a bit ridiculous. Maybe Filiel’s proposal had a lot more impact than he thought. Can everyone figure out how to get Yui to come out of her shell and try to be the prodigy she is? And can they do this with anything other than snack bribes?

We know Yui’s backstory with her father, so can sympathize with her. Well, *I* can sympathize with her. I have a feeling a lot of readers are going to bounce off Yui hard, and I get it. What’s more, to those who DON’T know Yui’s abusive backstory, she comes across as an arrogant, uncaring, overprivileged creep, due to, well, everyone being in her corner. The middle of the book, where Yui is forced to fight battles, is a tale of two halves. In the first half, you grind your teeth at how stubborn and irritating Yui is being. Then, in the back half, we see her going up against one of the strongest men in the kingdom, and she shows off WHY she’s hiding everything and trying to avoid showing her true magic at all. Yui knows very well what her father wants. He wants to use her, marry her off, and otherwise treat her like a thing. And it terrifies her, because her father is a noble, and as we’ve seen in this series, nobles kinda suck.

Fortunately, by the end of the book, she does accept Filiel’s feelings, so in future books we can… what’s that? No volumes in two years>? Webnovel also looks abandoned? Well then. In any case, I enjoyed this.

The Blessing of Liefe: Leave This Magical Letdown Alone!, Vol. 1

By Kureha and Yoko Matsurika. Released in Japan as “Liefe no Shukufuku: Muzokusei Mahō Shika Tsukaenai Ochikobore toshite Hottoite Kudasai” by Arian Rose. Released in North America by J-Novel Heart. Translated by Alex Castor.

This one took me by surprise a bit. The opening suggests it’s going to be a much darker book, with a girl who has “useless magic” getting physically and emotionally abused by her terrible father. But after her mother divorces said father and returns to her life as a commoner, everything starts to get much better, for the most part. Oh, sure, people still bully her, and she’s forced to endure verbal abuse from various folks. But there are a ludicrous amount of people in her corner, and as it turns out (please tell me you’re not surprised) her magic that’s useless unless you spend years studying it really hard turns out to be fantastic when you actually do this. In the end, she wins battle tournaments, scores high in exams (by accident), and even helps to heal, both with magic and the heart, the second prince, her childhood friend and a man who is deeply in love with her. Something she, of course, does not get at all.

Yui O’Brian (later Yui Curtis) is born with non-elemental magic, in a world where the ‘fire/water/wind/earth” dichotomy is everything, and her magic is seen as support, and something not to be bothered with. As such, not only does her father despise her, but kids make fun of her, and once she’s in school, arrogant nobles look down on her. Fortunately, it turns out that Yui has had, for some time now, a ludicrous number of allies. Her twin older brothers adore her. The second prince sneaks out of the castle and meets up with her, and since she’s the only one who can touch him and his over the top magic and not be injured or killed, the former king is absolutely fine with this. Her mother remarries another noble who turns out not only to be devoted to his wife and daughter (to an annoying degree – see below), but is also the prime minister to the current king. And her friends in the “losers” class at school all seem to be far too powerful for that class. What’s going on here?

At one point, Yui is called to the castle after a magical accident traumatizes the second prince, and as she goes off to his room I was expecting her to pose dramatically and say “It’s OK. I’m a light novel protagonist.” There is… frankly, a distinct LACK of drama and trauma after about page 10 or so, and while I think the story works better for it, folks looking for actual struggle may be a bit annoyed here. Speaking of annoying, while I don’t think that the stepdad is incestuous like some other folks discussing the book, he is a ludicrous example of the “overaffectionate/overprotective dad” trope we see a lot of in Japanese anime and manga. Usually they end up being the comedic butt of jokes, but alas, Layce has too much power for anyone to push back against him (except Yui). I did also enjoy seeing a “noble marrying a commoner” love story go the way it likely really would in a non-light novel: Yui’s father wanted to marry Yui’s mother, a commoner, harassed and bullied her till she gave in, and then hated her once something did not go his way. Even in a series like this where Yui has allies everywhere, nobles are mostly scum.

We get a confession at the end of this book, but Yui is not emotionally prepared to respond, and there are some other subplots that haven’t finished yet. I’ll definitely be reading more, but this feels like a series where someone has entered cheat codes for the heroine’s life.