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Japon, an 34 de l’ère Seika.
Tout le pays est sous le choc d’un attentat ayant failli provoquer un désastre nucléaire. À la surprise générale, l’affaire se reporte bientôt sur le terrain de la censure lorsque le Comité d’amélioration tente de procéder à l’arrestation d’un auteur dont les écrits auraient pu influencer les terroristes. Rapidement, le combat pour la liberté de l’écrivain prend des dimensions insoupçonnées : les bibliothèques comme les censeurs y voient une occasion inespérée de gagner du terrain et s’engagent dans une bataille qui pourrait bien mettre un terme au conflit en chamboulant à tout jamais le fragile équilibre des forces qui règne entre les deux parties. L’enjeu est de taille pour le Groupe d’Intervention. Mais pour l’heure, Iku doit faire face à une perspective beaucoup plus angoissante : son premier rendez-vous avec le lieutenant Dojo.

256 pages, Paperback

First published November 1, 2007

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About the author

Hiro Arikawa

73 books1,498 followers
Hiro Arikawa won the tenth annual Dengeki Novel Prize for new writers for Shio no Machi: Wish on My Precious in 2003, and the book was published the following year. It was praised for its love story between a heroine and hero divided by age and social status, and for its depiction of military structures. Although she is a light novelist, her books from her second work onwards have been published as hardbacks alongside more literary works with Arikawa receiving special treatment in this respect from her publisher, MediaWorks. Shio no Machi was also later published in hardback. Her 2006 light novel Toshokan Sensō (The Library War) was named as Hon no Zasshi's number one for entertainment for the first half of 2006, and came fifth in the Honya Taishō for that year, competing against ordinary novels.

She often writes about the Japan Self-Defense Forces (JSDF) and her first three novels concerning its three branches are known as the Jieitai Sanbusaku (The SDF Trilogy); she also wrote about the fictional Library Forces in the Toshokan Sensō series. Raintree no Kuni, which first appeared as a book within a book in Toshokan Nairan was later published by Arikawa as a spin-off with another publisher. It was adapted into a film titled World of Delight released on November 21, 2015.[2][3]Her novel Shokubutsu Zukan (ja) will be adapted into a film titled Shokubutsu Zukan: Unmei no Koi, Hiroimashita and scheduled for release on June 4, 2016.

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Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
Profile Image for Alyssa.
441 reviews39 followers
September 18, 2020
This was so good! 😱
And concludes the series perfectly.


Now making this one of my favorite series of all time. Both subject, story and characters. ❤️

Just to give you an idea of how sucked into the story I was, my bf just rolled his eyes at me about an hour ago because I was still up at 4am reading the book. 🤣

(Once again, full English review below.)



[ Reviews des tomes précédents : 1 | 2 | 3 ]
(Si ce n'est pas déjà fait, vous seriez inspirés de lire celles-ci d'abord car je vais me contenter d'écrire dans la continuité des précédents tomes.)

Alors que j'attends généralement les derniers tomes d'une série au tournant, et en particulier les dystopies (*ahem*THG/TMR*ahem*), j'ai été ravie de voir que je ne finirais pas sur une déception. Ce dernier tome de Library Wars ne fait que confirmer la qualité de cette série et le travail de l'auteure pour construire son monde fictionnel, son histoire, ses personnages.

Vous remarquerez que j'ai bien généreusement attribué une note de 5 étoiles à ce volume (contre 4 pour chacun des volumes précédents), ce qui est un fait assez rare en soi pour être mentionné. (J'ai un peu du mal avec les notes "parfaites", d'où que ça arrive très peu souvent.) C'est d'une part pour saluer cette belle conclusion à une série qui restera à l'avenir très chère à mon cœur, mais aussi parce que ce volume a un petit quelque chose en plus par rapport aux précédents, que je vous explique d'ailleurs tout de suite.

Donc, comme mentionné plus haut, j'ai fini de lire ce dernier tome à 4h du matin, car je n'ai tout simplement pas pu m'arrêter en chemin... ce qui ne m'était pas arrivé depuis longtemps, soit dit en passant. Contrairement aux précédents qui s'articulaient autour de 5 chapitres traitant chacun d'une petite affaire et pouvant donc presque se lire de façon indépendante, dans ce volume, c'est une seule grosse affaire qui nous préoccupe. Le tout, sans véritable temps mort.

En fait, ce tome pourrait presque se lire seul. (Ce que je déconseille cela dit, car d'une part on y perdrait tout le développement des personnages et des éléments de compréhension sur certains points, et d'autre part parce que les autres volumes valent tout autant le coup d'être lus car chacun apporte un peu d'eau au moulin.)

Pour résumer très vite fait... Dans ce tome-ci, le Japon est victime d'une attaque terroriste dont les détails s'apparentent énormément à un livre d'un certain Kurato Toma. Le Comité d'Amélioration décide se s'en prendre à l'auteur en question, ce qui ouvre un nouveau point de débat sur la censure vs la liberté d'expression. Le tome tourne ensuite autour du Groupe d'Intervention des Bibliothèques qui va devoir protéger l'auteur, et mène l'histoire sur des questions aussi bien politiques que sociétales. (Sans oublier l'évolution des relations des personnages, en particulier entre Iku et Dojo, qui approche de sa conclusion également.)
« Parfois, l'enfer est pavé de bonnes intentions. Les personnes qui pensent à mal ont clairement conscience de leur soif de destruction. Tandis que ces braves gens ne se rendent pas toujours compte des dégâts qu'ils peuvent causer. »

Je l'avais dit sur le premier tome, mais je le redis car ça s'applique toujours autant : cette histoire est presque trop réaliste, d'où son impact d'autant plus fort.

Le résumé (plutôt mauvais) que je vous est fait vous fera probablement penser à d'autres livres ou films (perso, ça me fait penser à quelque chose type Les Experts ou NCIS, ce genre de séries policières, où je suis quasi sûre qu'il y a au moins eu un épisode dans le genre), mais ce livre-ci sera un des rares à porter sur le côté politique qu'implique l'affaire et à apporter un vraie réflexion sur la censure.

Mais au-delà de tout ça, ce que j'aime dans cette série, c'est qu'on ne reste pas dans le pessimisme ambiant avec une ambiance lourde car les personnages sont toujours là pour nous apporter le sourire au détour d'une page. (Iku et Dojo méritent un trophée pour les idioties qu'ils apportent parfois. 😏)

Bref, je ne sais pas trop quoi ajouter d'autre à ce niveau car au bout de 4 reviews, j'ai un peu l'impression de me répéter. LISEZ-LES ! (Les livres, pas mes reviews. Enfin si, elles aussi, mais c'est secondaire.)

Mais si je devais résumer ce que je retiens de ce livre et cette série et qui pourraient vous motiver à vous lancer dedans : (1) une histoire solide, (2) une fiction réaliste et développée, (3) des réflexions fortes sur des sujets importants et toujours d'actualité, (4) des personnages attachants, (5) beaucoup d'humour.

Voilà voilà !

D'ailleurs, je pense que ma prochaine lecture sera Fahrenheit 451 pour rester dans le thème.



[ Reviews for previous volumes: 1 | 2 | 3 ]
(In case you missed them, you might want to read these first because I'm gonna write as a follow-up to the previous volumes.)

Although I'm usually expecting too much from the last book of a series, especially distopias (*coughs*THG/TMR*coughs*), this was great to end on such a positive note. This last Library Wars volume confirms the quality of the series and the work the author did to build her fictional world, story and characters.

Rare enough fact to be mentioned: I went ahead and put a beautiful 5 stars instead of my usual 4, to honour this lovely conclusion to a series sure to be close to my heart from now on, but also because this specific volume has a little something extra compared to the previous volumes, and that I'm gonna explain right away.

As mentioned above, I stayed up very late to finish reading this. It has been quite a while since the last time I read a book in one sitting by the way. Unlike the previous books which were built in 5 chapters each revolving around a small case, this time it's one big case that will keep us busy the whole book. And this, without any down-time.

Actually, you could almost read this book as a standalone. (I wouldn't recommend it though because you'd lose everything the previous books built to make it even better than it already is.)

Long story short... In this volume, Japan is victim from a terrorist attack, which closely ressembles a book from a certain Kurato Toma. The committee decides to attack said author, which open a new debate about censorship vs freedom of speech. The book then revolves around the librarian forces trying to protect the author, and leads the story towards questions both political and societal. (Not to forget, the evolution of the relationship between the protagonists, in particular Iku and Dojo, which reaches its conclusion as well.)

I said this for the first volume, but it still applies: this story is almost too real, which makes its impact even stronger.

The summary (pretty bad one) I did might remind you of some other books or movies (personnally, it reminds me of those CSI or NCIS TV series, in which I'm pretty sure there's at least one episode with a similar case), but this book is one of the very few to address the political implications and bring a real reflexion about censorship.

But beyond that, what I like about this series is that it doesn't stay in that gloomy pessimistic atmosphere because the characters are always there to bring a smile to your face. (Iku and Dojo deserve an award for all the stupid situations they create sometimes. 😏)

Well, not too sure what I could add because after 4 reviews, I kinda feel like I'm repeating myself. READ THEM. (The books, not my reviews. Actually these too, but that's secondary.)

But if I had to sum up what I retain from this book and series and that could motivate you to get into it: (1) a solid story, (2) a realistic and developed fiction, (3) strong reflexions about important topics that are still relevant, (4) endearing characters, (5) a lot of humour.

That's about it!

By the way, I think my next reading might be Fahrenheit 451 to stay on topic.
Profile Image for Wan Norjihan Abdullah.
Author 2 books10 followers
February 23, 2018
Toshokan Kakumei (Library Revolution) brings the library wars into a globally discussed issue. When an attack on a power plant mimicking a story of a novel, the author of it has been chased down by the Media Improvement troops.

This should be a light novel series (being 3 preceding serials : Toshokan Sensou/Library Wars, Toshokan Nairan/Library Schism and Toshokan Kiki/Library Crisis) but the issues in the novels is with reading, about the concept of book banning, politics, intelligence and standing up to one principle.

Those who love books and libraries should read these books. Highly recommended.

'I wish I could read and understand Japanese'
Profile Image for Luroka.
94 reviews
September 14, 2025
Une conclusion solide à une de mes saga préférées, et j'en profite pour réitérer mon regret quant à l'absence de traduction des deux tomes spin-off (別冊 図書館戦争) que j'adorerais lire.

"'Que pensez-vous de la censure ?' demanda Shibasaki d'un ton si léger qu'on aurait pu croire qu'elle parlait du repas de midi.
'C'est un acte qui devrait être éliminé, répondit-il sans hésitation. Il n'existe pas de censure juste en ce monde. Elle est toujours le reflet des préjugés de ceux qui nous dirigent. Aussi contestable que soit un texte, le peuple a le droit d'y accéder et de juger par lui-même. Bien sûr, si des écrits causent du tort à tout ou partie de la population, il devient nécessaire de les traiter avec prudence, mais c'est une décision qui relève du pouvoir judiciaire.'
" (p.55)
Profile Image for Carina.
187 reviews12 followers
April 1, 2022
I loved this book so much! The conclusion to the whole story and how they managed to get th public to critisize the Media Improvement Act was amazing and really clever! The whole story around that actor was so smart and I think it was really reflective of society. Not to mention the conclusion tothe lovestory of Iku and Doujo. I loved how he laid Toma-senseis fate in her hands and trusted her to do it when he was injured. I loved how they met after Iku had confessed to him already and he mad eher do it again. It was just sweet. The whole build-up to their relationship was so well done over the three books and you could definitely see their character development. The epilogue just left me swooning!
Profile Image for Erika.
2,823 reviews87 followers
January 23, 2020
このシリーズの根幹「図書館が武装する」に未だに納得しきれてないので、今回もイマイチ...いや、もしかしたら舞台が私の身近な所じゃなかったら(架空の国とか)、もっと楽しく読めたかも。
でも西多摩出身で小中高大と青梅線中央線をだんだん東に出てきた身としては...うーん。武蔵境って私の大学ある所やもんな...
なので、政治的駆け引きも途中から斜め読み。()銃器でどんぱちの戦闘シーンも斜め読み。

ならば何をちゃんと読んだのかと聞かれると...最後の方は全部斜め読みになってたかも...
中心となるキャラは、やはり画一的で薄っぺらく感じるし、主人公2人やその周りの恋の行方も、あぁそうですか、くらいな感じ。
ラノベだからかなぁ。

そのメインの恋愛も、同じ図書館隊員同士じゃなくて、良化隊員と図書館隊員との間の愛、とかにした方が、もっとハラハラして面白かったんじゃないかな。
ここに登場する良化隊員はやはり書き割りの「頭悪い悪役」そのものだし...(この「ロミジュリ」的展開を思いついたのは、)

今回も巻末に児玉清との対談が載っていて、本編とは関係ないけど、「作家は切り捨てる能力が必要」という言葉が印象的だった。ただのうんちく垂れ流しになるのを避けるためには、学んだ事を90%切り捨てる。(QEDシリーズの作者と編集者に聞かせたい)

コンセプトは面白いし、ハマる気持ちも理解は出来る。
番外編の5-6巻も読もうと思うので、及第点の星3つ。

2020/1/23追記:
「別冊図書館戦争I」のあとがきより:
9.11はトム・クランシーの著書が参考にされたんじゃないかという話があった→当麻蔵人は、トム・クランシーのもじり!
Profile Image for Amber Grissom.
45 reviews2 followers
April 15, 2020
English e-book translation by Melithiel. By far the best content of the four novels, and now I'm said that it's over. A thoroughly enjoyable series that makes me question a lot and think more abstractly about the effects of censorship. There is a good balance between the high action moments that take the lead in this novel and the lighthearted romantic side notes. Personally, this has a high re-read likelihood.
Profile Image for Gracie.
146 reviews2 followers
December 27, 2022
This was the best book out of the 4! My favorite out of the series and one of my favorite out of all my books! I loved it and it ended perfectly not lacking in anything. When the book was over I was happy and it didn't leave me wanting more. I hope one day that it will be printed in English so I can own my own printed copy of this book!
Profile Image for Kristina.
101 reviews
August 18, 2016
Book 4 had the most interesting subject matter, but had somewhat of a slow pace. The scenes in and on the way to Osaka lacked the sense of danger they should have had.

When I first stumbled across the Library Wars manga at my local library, I was very intrigued by the premise: libraries militarized in order to battle censorship. As a fan of books like Jasper Fforde's Thursday Next Series, how could I resist? Sadly I after reading the first volume, I felt disappointed. It felt too shallow. Iku was too immature. It was too unbelievable that she could get away with yelling and cursing at her superior officer. There didn't seem to be a justifiable reason for Dojo's romantic interest in her. The character development seemed lacking.

I decided to give the original light novel a try, as experience had showed me that they often make up the difference when the manga is lacking in these areas. The novel definitely filled in some of those character development gaps, but not enough to make me continue the series at that time.

Recently, I decided to give book 2 a shot. I'm not even sure what spurred the desire. I'm glad I did. What had seemed like a shallow YA plot developed a much deeper political tone. I didn't feel like Iku matured much by the end of the second book, but I saw more development in the other characters, and we got to see more inside Dojo's head.

Books 3 and 4 were definitely the highlight of the series. I felt like Iku finally experienced some significant growth. I also find myself thinking a lot about the political themes: the role of government, censorship, protecting personal freedoms even at the expense of the "greater good", fighting terrorism, allowing people to choose for themselves.

The romance and humor are fun little additions to break up some of the seriousness of these political themes. I'm glad I gave this series another chance.
Profile Image for Elizabeth Fleming.
47 reviews
October 11, 2020
I love this series with a passion. Firstly, because the subject, censorship and freedom of speech, lie close to my heart. Secondly, because of how diverse and charming the characters are, and how much you can see them grow throughout the story.
And last, but not least, because of those light-hearted moments of humour and fluff between the heavy politically discussions and military battle scenes.
It's for these three reasons I've not only read the light novels, but also watched the anime, the anime OVA and the three live-action movies, simply because I can't say goodbye. I still have the manga on my list, luckily enough.

Livejournal's Melithiel did an amazing job with translating the novels, offering her own little explanations for non-Japanese readers.
29 reviews
April 13, 2024
perfect conclusion to a perfect series. i love books. i love stories. i love people who love stories. I love romances where physical attraction takes the backstage while we let mutual respect and admiration for each other be the foundation of a relationship, where two people Very similar to each other, repelling but both impulsive and reckless forces, fall in love for each other’s sense of belief and principles, seeing strength in their weaknesses, finding courage in their flawed ways.
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