Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book
Rate this book
윈필 왕국 제2의 항만 도시 라우즈번. 뇨히라를 떠난 후로 처음 오게 된 대도시에 신이 난 현랑의 딸 뮤리. 그리고 교회 개혁의 사명에 가슴을 불태우는 콜. 그러나 막상 두 사람을 기다리고 있던 것은 무장한 세금 징수인이었다. 하이랜드의 기지로 궁지에서 탈출한 두 사람은 ‘여명의 추기경’이라 찬사받는 콜의 활약이 오히려 왕국과 교회 간의 대립에 박차를 가하고 있다는 사실을 알게 되는데….

436 pages, ebook

First published March 9, 2019

7 people are currently reading
140 people want to read

About the author

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
33 (41%)
4 stars
27 (33%)
3 stars
19 (23%)
2 stars
1 (1%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for S.Q. Eries.
Author 7 books14 followers
May 7, 2020
In Summary

Our travelers arrive in Rausbourne to find it teetering on the brink of war. The Twilight Cardinal’s actions have spurred people to openly challenge the Church, but an armed conflict might just bring the Winfiel Kingdom to ruin. Col is confronted with the fact that his actions have worldwide consequences, and this volume is less adventuring and more pondering how to use his far-flung influence.

The Review

After their detour in Desarev, Col and Myuri finally arrive in Rausbourne, where Col’s supposed to report to the noblewoman Hyland. Unfortunately, their boat hasn’t even docked in the city port when Col’s taken into custody by the Rausbourne Tax Collector Association, an incident which immediately triggers a confrontation with the local traders’ association.

Col’s activities in the North haven’t gone unnoticed, and the deeds of the Twilight Cardinal have emboldened the Rausbourne tax collectors to get belligerent with the local religious authorities. On the surface, it looks like another Kingdom backed foray against the corrupt Church. However, the tax collectors are backed by Heir Klevend, a royal upstart out to usurp the throne. Additionally, the clergy are holed up in the cathedral, unwilling to engage anyone, but they don’t have to fight because merchants and their mercenaries are facing the tax collectors for them.

This is a situation with multiple actors, not all of them obvious, and their motivations aren’t what you’d immediately assume. The bulk of the story is Col and Myuri getting to the heart of the conflict and discovering more layers than they imagined. While the complexity makes it interesting, it’s not a light read. Having to keep track of how everyone is connected and why was a real mental workout.

While the original Spice and Wolf arc was sparing with its nonhuman characters, Col and Myuri seem to encounter a new nonhuman with each leg of their journey, and here it’s Sharon, the head of the Tax Collector Association. Heir Hyland, whom we haven’t seen since the early part of Volume 2, returns to the story, and we get a real blast from the past with the crafty merchant Eve arriving in Rausbourne. It’s because of the unique connections Col and Myuri have with these individuals that Col’s able to get a grasp on the situation, but watching the different personalities interact is pretty fun, too. Col may be a mild-mannered guy, but he attracts strong females. Despite his intentions of celibacy, one scene in particular with Myuri, Eve, and Hyland seems awfully like a harem situation.

Hasekura-sensei does a good job interweaving Winfiel politics, economic opportunity, and a defensive religious organization into the plot. There is an aspect I found troubling though. Along with the Church’s financial corruption, this volume adds the sin of sexual impurity. Basically, most priests had affairs, so much so these illicit relationships were an open secret. To make it worse, when they abandoned their lovers and children to rise in the church ranks, the Church deliberately and knowingly altered records to erase any inconvenient relationships.

Despite his desire to reform the Church, when Col meets one such priest, his response is less indignation and more along the lines of, “Well, he had his reasons.” Weirder is that another pastor, who himself is one of these illegitimate children, is in love with a woman, and the solution is to settle the pair together in a monastery dedicated to raising orphans rather than having the pastor find work that doesn’t require celibacy. Given that no one seems capable of following the celibacy rule, it seems odd Col never questions its necessity. At any rate, if the Church gets any more rotten than this, Myuri may be right that it’s better to destroy and build something new rather than to clean house.

Extras include the first eight pages printed in color, world map, eight black-and-while illustrations, and afterword.

For more manga and book reviews, drop by my blog Keeping It In Canon!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Kayleigh.
712 reviews5 followers
September 13, 2021
I love Eve Bolan, the embodiment of a wolf in humanities clothing. Was so fun to see them meeting old "friends" and meeting new nonhumans
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Nuniflex.
145 reviews3 followers
February 10, 2021
THEY JUST KEEP ADDING MORE AND MORE CLOSURE TO THE DEITY WORLD. I AM CREAMING MYSELF JUST THEORIZING
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.