Category Archives: looks like a job for a maid

Looks Like a Job for a Maid! The Tales of a Dismissed Supermaid, Vol. 2

By Yasuaki Mikami and Kinta. Released in Japan as “Maid nara Touzen desu. Nureginu wo Kiserareta Bannou Maid-san wa Tabi ni Deru Koto ni Shimashita” by Earth Star Novel. Released in North America by J-Novel Heart. Translated by Sylvia Gallagher.

I do appreciate that, in a story that features a ridiculously overpowered maid, her friend the incredibly powerful mage, her friend the genius inventor, and her friend the incredibly strong wolf girl, that this is a series that still manages to have its feet firmly on the ground. Sure, it would be a lot of fun to see every single problem defeated through the power of being a really good maid, but that’s not the story the author is trying to tell. We especially see that in the longest part of the book, where our party arrives at a beach resort town that has a significant slum part, and while it would be easy for Nina to magically clean it better and hand out free meals, that won’t solve the underlying problem, which is capitalism. Besides, Nina is also dealing with larger issues. As we see in the second story in this book, she’s got a bit of PTSD.

This is an ongoing narrative, but the book can also be divided fairly easily into four parts. 1) Nina goes to thank the merchants responsible for helping her with the preservative issue at the end of Book 1, only to find they’re going under because of corporate espionage and also their manager is a love-besotted dimwit; 2) Their search for Tien’s parents leads then to a mercenary company that supposedly has lapalunes in their huge mansion… but won’t let them be seen; 3) The beach resort plot I mentioned above; and 4) Nina is accosted by both a noble who wants to make her his “third wife”, and his chief maid, who recognizes Nina has been trained by a “drunken psychopath” (Nina does not deny this), and demands that they have a maid battle! Meanwhile, Nina is finding it harder and harder to hide from whose who want to find her.

There are two really strong parts of this novel. (The weak part is the first story, which needs to rely on everyone being either incredibly dumb or incredibly forgiving or both.) The first is at the end of the second story, where Nina is set up in exactly the same way that she was at the start of the series, and accused of theft. This causes her to come close to a complete nervous breakdown, and I think if Tien hadn’t yoinked her away from there ASAP she would have. Nina tends to think of herself as a maid and has little sense of self, and they need to do something about that or this is going to come up again. The other is at the end of the maid competition, where the other maid claims victory by doing things the fastest, but Nina genuinely wins because she knows being a maid is not about laundry or cooking or errands, it’s about people and how to make their life better. You are a maid, not a robot or a slave.

The book ends with the party being summoned to the Empress, and I suspect there’s only so long that they can avoid having to deal with the main problem of this series: Nina is too valuable to be allowed to happily live her life adventuring with friends. She needs to be chained down somewhere and forced to be brilliant for the state. I look forward to seeing how the author gets out of this bind.

Looks Like a Job for a Maid! The Tales of a Dismissed Supermaid, Vol. 1

By Yasuaki Mikami and Kinta. Released in Japan as “Maid nara Touzen desu. Nureginu wo Kiserareta Bannou Maid-san wa Tabi ni Deru Koto ni Shimashita” by Earth Star Novel. Released in North America by J-Novel Heart. Translated by Sylvia Gallagher.

It’s always interesting to see how light novels deal with the age old problem of “my workplace is horrible and no one appreciates me”. Sometimes they just have the person die and end up in another world where they can get cool powers and women. But this is a J-Novel Heart title, despite an utter lack of romance, so instead we get something a bit more villainess-adjacent. Here we have the classic “I work and I slave but everyone abuses me except one or two people” plot, which inevitably begins with the protagonist being framed for something she didn’t do and thrown out. And indeed, that’s what happens. But guess what? When you leave a bad place of employment, sometimes it’s good for you! You can help others achieve their dream. You can show off your skills. And you can try to get a sense of who you are as a person besides your job. Nina has trouble with that last one.

Nina is a maid who can do anything, thanks to the harsh training of an unseen mentor. But sadly, the training did not include self-confidence, so when she’s framed for breaking an expensive vase, she has to leave without even a reference. Deciding to travel (she’s got money as she never spends anything on herself), she comes across a rookie magician who has the talent for Level 5 magic but can’t seem to access it; an inventor whose parents are famous but who seems to be stuck on that one final thing that will make her go down in history; and a beastgirl working in a mine who’s trying her best but finds all food in the area makes her sick. All three of them have their lives turned upside down by Nina, who is bad at doing things for herself, but when it comes to helping others, there’s literally nothing she cannot do.

This has a lot of fun aspects to it. Technically it’s an isekai, though Nina is not the one with memories from Japan. Emily and Astrid are nice and relatable, and once Nina solves their immediate problems they are determined to travel with her so that she stays out of trouble. Spoiler: she does not. All four of the young women in this book suffer to a degree from low self-esteem – for Emily and Astrid it’s because of their continued failures in their profession, and with Tien it’s due to starvation, but also the fact that her parents abandoned her and she doesn’t know why. Nina, though, is the toughest nut to crack, and I really love that Emily spots what Nina needs right now – a family. Nina needs to find a way to define herself that isn’t “maid”, and so far she just can’t do that. Honestly, I suspect given the narrative of the series she won’t be able to, but the effort to do so is the important part.

Upcoming books in the series make it sound a bit like Make My Abilities Average only with less work-obsessed orphans. (OK, there *is* a work-obsessed orphan in this, but she becomes one of the party.) If you love found family stories and don’t mind a maid who can solve any problem almost immediately, this is a great deal of fun.