By Carlo Zen and Shinobu Shinotsuki. Released in Japan as “Youjo Senki” by Enterbrain. Released in North America by Yen On. Translated by James Balzer.
It’s been quite a while since the last volume of these in English, even though in Japan, the two volumes came out only one month apart. That said, this is also the final volume of the series to date, as we have not yet seen the 15th volume in Japan as of this date. I don’t really blame the author, as it can be rather tricky to get the right tone for this series. It’s an anti-war but pro-military series, and it has to show us that war is hell while also managing to convey that reading about a good firefight is a hell of a lot of fun. It also can’t really kill off too many named characters – for all that we hear about people dying in this book (including, possibly, the greatest comedy character in the series, who returns in this book), the core of Tanya’s unit are still around. Even if they’re tired. So very, very tired.
The bulk of the start of the book is the aftermath of Tanya’s faked retreat orders, and how everyone seems to be disbelieving – not surprising, given everything we hear about the Empire. Fortunately, after Grantz flies all the way back to the capital and tries to avoid various court-martials and treason accusations as he barrels along, Zettour gets the message and is able to confirm – carry out those orders. Of course, that’s easier said than done, and Tanya and her group don’t even have that luxury – while the army retreats, they’re tasked with flying into the Federation attack, stopping supply trains, hitting disguised air bases, and trying not to die. And then after THAT, they get to take almost every mage in the entire not-German army on a suicide mission to take out various Federation strongholds. And then the worst possible thing happens – the enemy blows up their kitchen. (No really, think about it, surviving while exhausted on dry rations is TERRIBLE.)
I’m mentioning the exhaustion a lot because it really comes across here. By the end of the book Tanya’s comrades are dead on their feet, and even she sometimes gets to the point where fatigue is making her a little loopier than she normally is. They’re doing things that shame soldiers, as while they’re advancing on the enemy, they have to leave their own fellow soldiers to die – they cannot save them and attack at the same time. it’s frustrating, unless you’re Tanya, who coolly explains why it has to happen. The only one who seems firmly in her camp all the time is Visha, who is more worried about Grantz, who’s gotten more to do lately, replacing her as adjutant. Tanya reassures her. Weiss, meanwhile, thinks they’ve both “turned rotten”, and he’s not wrong. By the end of the book, they’re being sent off to fight again… but not in the East! Tanya may finally get an opportunity to defect.
Assuming we get the next book, of course. For now, the Empire still hangs on. We’ll be waiting to see if it makes it through Book 15. For fans of… well, the light novels, really. Fans of the anime should probably try the manga first. And fans of Isekai Quartet may just hate this.

The author may be throwing a bone to the fans in this book, by allowing, in certain instances, for Vishal’s dedication to Tanya to come through in a little more personal fashion than it has so far, between the aforementioned veiled “jealousy” of Grantz and her immediate acceptance of suicidal missions so long as she’s flying cover for Tanya, and the more informal conversations they have while being woozy because of sleep deprivation. He also, kind of hilariously to me, reminds us how sort of abusive and one-sided that relationship is when Tanya is briefly seen “cradling in her arms” an exhausted Visha, only to essentially throw her on her pallet like a ragdoll so that she gets some sleep. It’s consideration… after a fashion.
I am also rather concerned about the implications of the conversation with Zettour at the end of the book, as SPOILER FOR WHO HASN’T READ IT YET he tells her he’ll work her to the bone even after the war and she takes that to be a promise of a rewarding position in a peaceful afterwards, and well, this series has long made it a point that communication issues are at the base of why things go to hell in this world… the reason to be worried is that it would not be beyond Zettour to agree to give the Alliance a pound of flesh for peace if that pound of flesh was decided to be the infamous Devil of the Rhine, and there are two parties in the Alliance frothing at the mouth for a chance to get their hands on her, one being Mary Sue, who at least has gotten to spar with her a few times, and the other, well, they haven’t done yet with the resident pedophile of the Federation yet, and that bodes even worse.