Success? Success! In the timeline of the novel series, roughly two years have passed. Although for readers, it surely feels like an eternity has transpired since this tiny, sickly, blue-haired weirdo embarked on her journey to become a librarian in world without books. ASCENDANCE OF A BOOKWORM #5 marks Myne's long-overdue hurdling of the challenges stymying her new livelihood. Paper? Ink? Binding instruments? Check. Check. And check. Now, all she needs to think about is the content.
ASCENDANCE OF A BOOKWORM #5 is low key, compared to the previous two volumes. There are no obvious, overarching conflicts and the number and appearance of antagonists are largely circumstantial and dealt with in the immediate aftermath. As such, readers will find this novel an easy and swift read for how it encircles Myne's ever-tightening grip on finally producing a book in this fantastical new land.
The ink-creation process, as with the paper-creation process, is a peculiar combination of trial and error that sees Myne, Lutz, and others assembling an array of odd materials and trying their utmost to find the perfect combination of luck and hard work. The team dabbles with woodblock printing, semi-professional stenciling, and eventually solid-ink, screen-printing techniques. It is fascinating and hilarious that so much authentic discussion can be had from the mind of a book otaku on subjects as obtuse as creating glue from animal skins or manufacturing pigments from crushed gemstones. Indeed, if Urano had put any of this info to practical use in her previous life, who knows what could've happened.
The moment these characters successfully draft, print, and bind their first book will ring surprisingly emotional for readers. Myne, herself, puts it best: "I started with nothing. No stamina, no strength, no money, no paper, no ink, no tools. But I challenged the world anyway, and my work finally bore fruit" (171).
The annoying apprentice shrine maiden, who is apparently a commoner, keeps surprising everyone at the temple. Sometimes her view of the world through the eyes of a bibliophile drips with acerbity (e.g., she pledges a "festival of blood" for the noble who trashes the temple's book room); sometimes her gullibility is equally ingenious as much as it is a liability (e.g., her fulfilling a summons under the protection of the Knight's Order leaves everyone's mouths agape). The author has mastered the tendency to surprise readers and other characters in the same line of thought, raising one's expectations that even after nearly a half-dozen volumes, Myne still has a lot of knowledge to bestow (and a lot of trouble to get into).
ASCENDANCE OF A BOOKWORM #5 dips its toes into the sentimental as well, but reserves such an exchange for the Epilogue, during which the High Priest and Myne have an open and honest discussion about how it is this little girl knows so much about, well, so much. Plainly speaking, Myne's aptitude is the stuff wars are fought over. As such, the High Priest, while written somewhat cynically, may end up being Myne's strongest and most important ally who ensures her long-term safety.