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Flowers for the Forest Beasts
Type
Genre
Tags[ ]
Rating(4.7 / 5.0, 119 votes)
5 | 81% (96 votes) |
4 | 13% (15 votes) |
3 | 3% (4 votes) |
2 | 3% (3 votes) |
1 | 1% (1 votes) |
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Language
Support Book (#ad)
Author(s)
One entry per lineArtist(s)
One entry per lineYear
Example: 2012
2012
Status in COO
Status in Country of Origin. One entry per line
1 Volume (Completed)
Licensed
No
Completely Translated
Original Publisher
One entry per lineEnglish Publisher
One entry per line
N/A
Release Frequency
Every 2 Day(s)Activity Stats [Graph]
Weekly Rank: #2000Monthly Rank: #2000
All Time Rank: #6523
Reading List [Graph]
On 1520 Reading Lists
Monthly Rank: #6226
All Time Rank: #5524
Description
Links are NOT allowed. Format your description nicely so people can easily read them. Please use proper spacing and paragraphs.In a world dominated by swords and magic, Cleo lives his lonely life where he believes painting is his sole purpose to life. Since Cleo was born in a noble family, he must prove himself worthy to become the family’s successor by participating in a certain trial. As he enters the forbidden forest, Cleo encounters a beast that is half human and half plant. After being easily captured by the beast that resembles a human girl, Cleo plans his escape by attracting the beast’s interest and keeping Cleo alive. Out of his expectations, the time they spent living with each other made him feel unbelievably relieved. However their calming daily life did not last very long…
Associated Names
One entry per lineMori no Majyuu ni Hanataba wo
森の魔獣に花束を
森の魔獣に花束を
Related Series
N/ARecommendations
N/ARecommendation Lists
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There are a lot of descriptions and information blocks that add very little, the space could have been much better used to describe and flesh out the characters and their environment. They are from radically different species, but it is more of an excuse than anything else as it doesn't build on these differences and/or similarities. It is supposed to be a story where a strong human-looking beast comes to learn about positive emotions and appreciates art, but the storytelling manages to leave you with the feeling that the boy is a crafty monster tamer that made the monster that supposedly caught him into an entity that would not hesitate to sacrifice her own well being for him. Don't get me wrong, it's not the worst thing I have read, by a large margin, it's just that it seems to be going for a certain feel and fails to deliver. The translation is fine as expected from yoraikun, you are not going to have to suffer unedited machine translation, it is all in properly written English. (I guess reading this after re-reading the cicada dragon one does hurt it a lot, as they are very similar on the subject matter but so different in execution and quality) All in all, while it's certainly not something to remember for years, it's decent enough to waste a few hours if you are bored with nothing better to read.
Some times, we need to think a bit more about life. On the educative plan, there are a few things we can learn from this story. 1: Building a fire pit 2: Grafting a plant onto another Emotionally, we can also dream or contemplate about this story. In the aspects of love and friendship.
Roselyne reacted strongly to that portion.
It's not as if the spottings of blue roses were few in number in the world. But their spotting sites shared a commonality, and they were often in the depths of forests humans rarely set foot in. What's more, if you tried to bring one back to grow more, once a week passes by, the blue color will drain away. Given a week, it becomes no more than an ordinary white rose. By the way, when a woman who was once a beauty completely changes in the span of only a few years, they might say, 'She was a blue rose'.
Whatever the case, blue roses were rare. While he had no intention to take one back and succeed the Grant House, since he had come all the way there, he did think he might as well see one at least once.