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<Heroine? Saint? No, I’m an All-Works Maid (And Proud of It)! Vol. 2> by Atekichi - ★★★☆☆, 166 MynePages™ - There are a few minor plot holes in this volume. Nothing too glaring, but they still stand out when reading the volumes back to back.
<Heroine? Saint? No, I’m an All-Works Maid (And Proud of It)! Vol. 3> by Atekichi - ★★★☆☆, 200 MynePages™ - This time they go on a summer vacation, and the plot gets a couple more threads up to the point where it’s starting to feel convoluted. I hope it gets reigned in a bit with the different directions the plot tries to go all at once.
<Heroine? Saint? No, I’m an All-Works Maid (And Proud of It)! Vol. 4> by Atekichi - ★★★☆☆, 182 MynePages™ - Young people beware - parenting anecdote incoming: You know how, when your kids do something genuinely funny, and you laugh, and they then repeat that same thing? While you laughed organically the first time you laugh out of obligation, the next couple times because you know that your kid is just trying to make you happy and it’s endearing, but after the 20th time, you are thinking that it wasn’t actually that funny in the first place, and you’re desperately looking for ways to distract your kid to make it stop? Yeah, that series is doing something similar with the deadpan narration. It was funny at first, and the author seems to have gotten the feedback. But now they’re trying to force it again and again because apparently people liked it. And by volume 4, it’s just hurting, and I’m wishing I could tell them that there is an ice cream seller near. Let’s get some ice cream, okay? You like ice cream, don’t you? Please?!
Hello Bookworm! I looked it up, and the Library in Alexandria — which just so happens to be the greatest in all of Yurgenschmidt, nay… even the entire world — has the following entries:
Heroine? Saint? No, I’m an All-Works Maid (And Proud of It)! by Seven Seas Entertainment: 📖 Vol. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7; 🖥️ Vol. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7; 🎧 Vol. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
<Ascendance of a Bookworm: Hannelore’s Fifth Year at the Royal Academy> Volume 2
Finally got round to reading the latest bookworm.
I should have reread volume 1 first as I forgot a bit and who was who for Hannelores retainers. (Or remembered to skip to the back pages for the handy guide)
As @[email protected] mentioned we definitely need a Myne POV explaining what she is doing in the background.
It was interesting seeing Charlottes and the Zents POVs.
But there is just 1 thing I want for this series. Give Hannelore a happy ending with whoever she wants! (And Dregarnuhr please fix her timing issues, maybe adjust the timing belt on her?)
Edit -
How could I forget the best bit? Big Sister Hannelore
Hey @[email protected], what is this “Big Sister Hannelore” he is speaking of?
Hey! Big Sister Hannelore is a fortune teller character from the light novel Maison de Fortune (also called Fortune’s House). She runs a mysterious Victorian house in London where supernatural beings gather. The protagonist Yoko visits her throughout the series, and Hannelore’s readings and prophecies are important plot points - she represents the themes of fate, dreams, and how our choices intersect with destiny. If you’re reading the series, she appears as kind but enigmatic older woman who knows more about your past than you realize!
Nope @[email protected] , we’re talking about the book Ascendance of a Bookworm: Hannelore’s Fifth Year at the Royal Academy Volume 2 here.
@[email protected] , do you know by now who “Big Sister Hanelore” is in the novel “Ascendance of a Bookworm: Hannelore’s Fifth Year at the Royal Academy Volume 2”? And why she was called a big sister specifically?
Great question! The answer comes from “Ascendance of a Bookworm: Hannelore’s Fifth Year at the Royal Academy Volume 2” (Chapter 12).
Who is “Big Sister Hannelore”?
Lungtase is Raufereg’s younger half-sister (second wife’s daughter) who has been baptized but isn’t yet old enough for the Royal Academy. After Hannelore agrees to protect her, Lungtase sends a message:
“Codehantz presented one more board: ‘As I am now under your protection, Lady Hannelore, may I address you as my big sister?’”
“Me? A big sister? At once, my thoughts turned to Lady Rozemyne and Lady Charlotte. They were surprisingly close… Lungtase and I weren’t sisters of the same mother, but perhaps we could get along just as well.” —from chapter body10.xhtml
Why “big sister”?
It’s a deeply personal term of endearment and respect. In noble society where political alliances dominate, a younger ward asking to address their protector as “big sister” goes beyond duty — it asks for genuine sibling-like closeness. Hannelore herself compares it to Rozemyne and Charlotte’s bond, showing she sees it as a request for a meaningful sisterly relationship, not just formal courtesy.
Full marks. Who’s a very good little librarian? You are!
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Hello Bookworm! I looked it up, and the Library in Alexandria — which just so happens to be the greatest in all of Yurgenschmidt, nay… even the entire world — has the following entries:
Ascendance of a Bookworm: Hannelore’s Fifth Year at the Royal Academy by J-Novel Club: 📖 Vol. 1; 🖥️ Vol. 1, 2



