-3d-hentai-.--....-gusya-.priestess.princess.and.the.fantasy -

But the second page made him stop. It wasn't a list. It was a story. A story about him . "Sora Tanaka, age 27. He hasn't cried since he was fifteen, when his older sister, Mika, told him his shonen jump drawings were 'a waste of tuition money.' He quit art that day. He became an editor to be close to the thing he feared most: failure." His coffee cup trembled in his hand. He read on. The notebook described his loneliness, his one-bedroom apartment with the dusty drawing tablet, his secret, three-in-the-morning habit of sketching Guts from Berserk —badly—before scrunching the paper into a ball.

Then he looked at the notebook one last time. The final page, which had been empty, now had a single line of fresh ink: "Recommendation complete. Now, draw the next page." He smiled. And he pressed call.

Attack on Titan was for his buried rage. Monster was for the question, "Am I a good person?" Vinland Saga was for the next line: "A true warrior needs no sword." The notebook was forcing him to see these stories not as entertainment, but as a sequence of philosophical battles he had to fight. -3D-hentai-.--....-gusya-.Priestess.Princess.and.the.Fantasy

Sora Tanaka was a ghost. Not literally, but as a mid-level editor at Kodansha’s international division , he haunted the margins of the industry. His job was to read the slush pile—thousands of manuscripts that would never see print. He was a professional dream-killer, until the day he found the notebook.

He opened his phone. He scrolled to "Mika." His thumb hovered over the call button. But the second page made him stop

He almost threw it away. "Lazy," he muttered. "Just a fan's top ten."

Then he reached the final recommendation on the list: A Silent Voice . A story about him

He did.

Underneath were ten titles. Sora knew them all. They were the legends: Berserk , One Piece , Fullmetal Alchemist , Naruto , Attack on Titan , Monster , Vagabond , A Silent Voice , Jujutsu Kaisen , and Vinland Saga .

The final line on page two was a command: "Turn to page three."

It wasn't a Death Note. It was something stranger.