She literally lies back and thinks of England D. Of course, our heroine gets through the horrific ordeal by day-dreaming about D. There are tons of moments where the men in the book are all "no homo, but I guess I'd fuqq." Even the authorial voice tries to suck D's dick he's described variously as an "Adonis" or a "gorgeous god of death."Īll of that gives Raiser of Gales a very googly-eyed teenagers-in-heat sort of vibe, which would fit the imagined audience for a light novel, but plays strangely against the book's grotty content threats of rape are pretty common in Raiser of Gales, and the sexual abuse of a minor by trusted adults rears it's head as a plot point-as does a scene in which a character is orally raped by her adopted father. There is a scene where schoolgirls openly lust after the vampire hunter. All women find D mysterious and irresistible. I'm not sure how much of this difference is the work of translation or present in the original, but it's safe to say that everybody in these books wants the D. I was still hungry from more Vampire Hunter after watching the two movies, and forgot (again) that the tone of the light novels is radically different from their animated counterparts. Hideyuki Kikuchi and Yoshitaka Amano, Vampire Hunter D: Raiser of Gales
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