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紫色のクオリア [Murasakiiro no Qualia]

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自分以外の人間が“ロボット”に見えるという紫色の瞳を持った中学生・毬井ゆかり。クラスでは天然系(?)少女としてマスコット的扱いを受けるゆかりだが、しかし彼女の周囲では、確かに奇妙な出来事が起こっている…ような?イラストは『JINKI』シリーズの綱島志朗が担当。「電撃文庫MAGAZINE増刊」で好評を博したコラボレーション小説が、書き下ろしを加え待望の文庫化!巻末には描き下ろし四コマのほか、設定資料も収録。

323 pages, Paperback

First published July 10, 2009

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Hisamitsu Ueo

24 books

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5 stars
102 (49%)
4 stars
66 (31%)
3 stars
26 (12%)
2 stars
12 (5%)
1 star
2 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 31 reviews
Profile Image for Sadifura.
45 reviews
February 27, 2024
This seemingly-simple light novel turns into a science-fiction, arguably slipstream epic that rivals the movie "Everything Everywhere All At Once". At first, it's a fairly simple light novel about a girl who sees robots from the point of view of her normal friend, Manabu "Gaku" Hatou. But after Gaku's run in with a serial killer involving Yukari replacing Gaku's arm with a cell phone, it gets far more complicated. Introducing complex hard sci-fi quantum physics concepts such as Fermat's Principle and other such things even beyond the simple "Schrodinger's Cat" phenomenon referenced in Japanese science fiction, fantasy, mystery, and slipstream fiction, I'd say Qualia the Purple is enjoyable for a certain audience: specifically, the audience of people who want a complex w/w relationship (and there are MANY) and equally complex science fiction plots.
Profile Image for Timo Brønseth.
44 reviews
April 26, 2017
:c

Friendship, compassion and determination. And some quantum physics. And "What! Wow, that took off..."

Intelligent author makes the philosophy and human interactions really good as well.
Profile Image for The Local Spooky Hermit.
348 reviews57 followers
June 29, 2023
Ugh. I don't even wanna talk about it rn. Just.. everything interesting is brushed past (TTATT)... theres like no real cute shoujo-ai or cool robots parts. Like my god for pages it goes on about different quantum physics theories. Brah i came for cute yuri and cool robots. Basically its like a bad movie where the end is "it was all a dream". THATS A GIANT NO NO. NO ONE LIKES THAT. AAAAGH!! So.. thanks I hate it.
Profile Image for Mio Thalén.
58 reviews4 followers
October 20, 2020
Wow. Ok. Wow. Alltså… Wow. Jag har länge försökt att skriva en recension av denna manga, men jag fastnar alltid på wow och har inte tagit mig längre. Men skam den som ger sig!

Jag tänker inte börja med att berätta vad denna serie handlar om utan istället börja med att prata om hur den ser ut. Jag läser inte så mycket manga, men min uppfattning är att den är ganska stereotypisk i hur personerna gestaltas, stora ögon, små munnar, alla är supersöta. Några av försättsbilderna är färglagda, resten är svartvitt. Jag önskar att hela serien var färglagd (även om jag definitivt förstår att man väljer att inte göra det), men jag känner att färg hade tillfört en extra dimension till berättelsen. (Har en tanke om att jag själv ska färglägga hela serien för hand, för skojs skull).

Men vad handlar denna serie om då? Bra fråga. Jag skulle säga att den egentligen har två handlingar som båda är lika viktiga.
Första spåret handlar om Gaku och hennes vän Yukari. Yukari har lila ögon och ser allt levande som robotar. Denna syn ger henne oväntade insikter om andra människors förmågor och svårigheter, och polisen ber henne om hjälp att fånga en mördare. Det visar sig att Yukari inte är ensam om att ha denna egenhet, men vad innebär det för en människa att se alla andra som saker? Och vilka konsekvenser får denna syn?

Nedan följer SPOILERS! (För jag vet ärligt talat inte hur jag ska kunna prata om denna bok utan att spoila).

Andra spåret handlar om Gaku och vad hon är beredd att göra för att rädda sin vän. Vi pratar inte om en liten skala, ett personligt val eller två. Nej, vi pratar om stora existentiella frågor och ifrågasättande, multi-universum och parallella verkligheter. Vi kommer till The Point of No Return där berättelsen tar ett tvärkast, lämnar spår ett och istället tar oss med på en hisnande resa med Gaku som lever och dör, om och om igen på olika sätt, allt för att rädda sin vän. Gakus enda mål, enda vilja, enda orsak till att existera, är för att rädda Yukari. Ingenting annat spelar någon roll, och Gaku gör vad som helst, vad som helst, för att lyckas, det finns ingen gräns, inget stopp. Men hon misslyckas även om och om igen, inget hon gör funkar.
Att läsa detta andra spår var magiskt, och fruktansvärt, på samma gång. Det var många tankar jag fick om frågor som inte är så lätta att besvara, typ, skulle jag vara beredd att gå till samma längd som Gaku för en vän? Varför finns jag? Finns jag ens? Hur många jag finns det? Vad är meningen med livet, universum och allting?

Jag rekommenderar denna historia, och rekommenderar att du har någon annan som läser den med dig, eller har läst den tidigare, som du kan prata med. Jag tror du kommer behöva det.

talaomte.se
Profile Image for Y.k. Greene.
Author 6 books35 followers
March 18, 2020
One of the best time travel based manga I've ever read. Though there were a lot of interesting elements that never were finished off, I loved every minute of this massively mind bending read.
Profile Image for Josh399.
48 reviews
August 9, 2023
Once upon a time, every school-based manga featured a young woman who was confident she was different from everyone else, despite being a regular human being (and she is always right!). This girl, and the unmemorable doofus she brings with her, are agents of chaos; they'll burn the entire setting to the ground before engaging with mid-terms or going to a school dance.

By the mid-point of these novels, the setting is unrecognizable, the story-logic is pseudo-Freudian, and the plot leaps 200 light-years every few chapters. And in the absence of all else character relationships shine through.

I love these stories; they're incredibly innovative and confident and rely on strong-willed women to bravely explore, utilize and unite in these complex stories. Qualia the Purple continues this wild ride.

In Qualia the Purple, Gaku befriends Yukari, who is unable to see human beings as distinct from mechanisms and robots. This distinction allows her to view humans for their parts and value machines for their souls. In school she is a bit of a loner, but her skills have already been proven in the world outside school, where she builds model robots, helps the police, and is a capable handyman. After a few plot events, Gaku is separated from Yukari. To see her friend again, she engages in an epic quest across time and reality to reunite with a version of her friend. She will travel, commit unimaginable crimes, cross universes, and become other people throughout this epic quest. In doing so, she will question the nature of her existence and Yukari's, and try to reason with the way the world is.

Two things I will say in Qualia's favour:

1) I really jived with Yukari's character. Yukari is uncompromising and spoiled; a necessity for this genre's hero. She is also gentle (she likes robots but hates the mech anime where they fight) and a true friend to Gaku and others. Hisamitsu plays with each character's attributes and explores the total possibilities of each world, but I liked how through it all Yukari kept her flawed vision. It was understood that without her vision she would not be who she is.

2) You may not like the ending, which is meta, quantum, time-wimey and all other splashword equivalents of "it was all a dream" but you have to respect the journey to get there. I found myself consistently mind-blown by Hisamitsu Ueo's style and creativity. Even when something was demonstrably wrong with their quantum analysis, it still felt fun to let it slide.

I think this is a great choice for fans of Steins Gate or Otherside Picnic; it's bleak lesbian representation with a large dose of sci-fi hypothesizing. It's a real Man-Vs-Universe story that will hit you in the feels, and then in the head, and then in the head a second time.
Profile Image for Ade.
1 review
October 25, 2023
Most complex way to internalize jealousy, longing, and yearning, spanned across billions of years in an instant, Qualia the Purple shines when it pivots from its surface level understanding of quantum mechanics and fully embraces Manabu's love for Yukarii told through her so-called "adaptability" and utter need for her beloved's survival despite everything. While the first section isn't bad in any sense of the word; it's a good introduction to both of our leads, it's when Manabu learns of Yukarii's planned transfer that the book starts to massively ramp up in scale and quality, becoming a time travel story spanning millenia.

The scale serves to sell the reader on Manabu's devotion to Yukarii, as both her love and passion is easily reflected in what she goes through to keep Yukarii safe and alive. I found it to be extremely engrossing; the quantum physics are an extremely interesting angle and their application functioned as a sort of ship of theseus, the more Manabu changes the more she still stays the same, even when her body is destroyed, the fact her love exists is what makes her identifiable to Yukarii in the last moments of the chapter.

Despite the question on if these events really happened or if it was just a dream, I do vouch for its approach to that subjective reality; it's not really necessary for all of that to have happened. It was Manabu's way of justifying itself to her, to understand her needs, the reality, and Yukarii's own want, and realizing that even if she does her best, most grandiose attempt, it won't mean much if it doesn't make her happy. In that sense, I can't be critical of the dream angle if Manabu as an individual still learned from that experience and it lead to the sweet ending between the two.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Marcus Laurence.
25 reviews1 follower
March 28, 2024
The first 60% of this book introduces mathematical concepts with the same enthusiasm as reading about them in a textbook does. I wanted to call it quits and dnf then and there, but then the next 30% actually applied them. I really, truly enjoyed the next 30%! Then the final 10% came apart. It's not so much that this book is bad, but it has a ton of plotholes that begin to appear if you think about them critically.

In the end literally nothing changes from the beginning of the book, and the main character slots comfortably into her role as the helping hand of an assisted suicide. Smiles all around!

If it helps, there's literally more het in this book than yuri. The manga, at least, actually makes it clear that these girls love each other.

There are some cool google-able terms though, so that's nice.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Benji.
331 reviews20 followers
March 6, 2024
Holy shit, y’all. This is a hard sci-fi novel about quantum mechanics and the philosophy of perception that begins as a cute story about a girl who sees people as robots. It’s wildly creative, smart, totally unexpected, and I loved every page. Highly recommend.

CWs: bullying, murder, dismemberment, torture, human experimentation, internalized biphobia
9 reviews1 follower
July 11, 2022
kinda sorta kinda like a twisted version of This Is How You Lose the Time War. sorta. kinda. not really.
Profile Image for Nick.
279 reviews33 followers
January 30, 2023
Manages to incorporate both yuri and sci-fi in an episodic first person manner not from the titular character but her friend.
Profile Image for CatSidhe.
40 reviews3 followers
May 13, 2023
That was a weird book. First part was the story of a girl who sees all people as robots and can repair them, the second part was about her girlfriend who starts to travel through all the parallel worlds in an attempt to save her life, which somehow involves a lot of discussion about quantum physics.

I quite liked it, although I was not sure at the end what the book was about. A love story between Schrödinger's lesbians ? A discussion about the way we perceive reality ? Who knows ? The only thing I know for sure is that it was really weird.
Profile Image for Distux.
40 reviews1 follower
Read
July 21, 2023
FERMATS THEOREM!!!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Awen.
18 reviews
Read
February 10, 2024
interesting philosophy was sprinkled in which was a nice surprise.

My first light novel.
Profile Image for Svetozar Stankov.
1 review1 follower
February 17, 2017
Definitely a must-read for anybody interested in cosmology and Theory of Everything.

First volume is certainly different from the other two. It's practically the anchor to the slightly crazy plot from there on. Or maybe it was the first volume that was crazy, and the rest was rational deliberation of scientific concepts? I'm not particularly sure.
Profile Image for R Holland.
6 reviews4 followers
April 5, 2016
One of my favorites hands down. (Side note: not sure if this is the book or the manga version... only one version available- I'm reviewing the manga version in any case) It's a pretty weird story, to be honest. But it's got everything. From yuri to mecha to fantasy to theoretical physics (not sure if it's entirely accurate... but I'm here for the story, not the facts).

This book messed me up. It's an existential ride that smacks you in the face every twelve seconds with a new different version of reality you never thought of. You think you're over one crazy plot twist, but nope! Here take some more mind-blowing shrapnel lodging itself in your gray matter.

Keep in mind this is a pretty niche, "specific audience" type of book (at least I think). It takes a bunch of specific genres and puts them together into a fabulous book- that might not cater to everyone's tastes. All in all, it's one of my favorite books, manga or otherwise ever, and I recommend it to people who like manga, yuri, mecha, theoretical physics, or just want to try something different.
Profile Image for Yasiru.
197 reviews131 followers
July 31, 2014
Incredibly well done! The beginning (though it has plenty going on- shoujo slice-of-life, a hint of yuri romance, sci-fi, murder mystery) doesn't quite hint at how thoroughly the implications of the premise is explored; stick through volume two though and it exceeds all expectations. It's just about all here- from interpretations of quantum theory, philosophical zombies, time reversibility of physical laws, causality, even quantum computation.

Here's the manga (you can download or view online), which I read- http://tenko.fansubban.org/qualia-the...

Here's the original light novel, which is lagging behind in translation, but which I mean to read- http://translation-blog.tumblr.com/po...
Profile Image for Isapropanol.
258 reviews3 followers
January 1, 2024
4,25
If the first stage of grief was a novel, really.

It's confusing, frustrating, kind of cute, but most important of all; sad?
I think you have to be in a certain mood to read this, as I tried (and failed) multiple times before I finally managed to get into the story. Despite that, I found it enjoyable.
192 reviews
August 27, 2023
Interesting plot that goes in unexpected places with quantum mechanic, time travel etc.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 31 reviews

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