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* NightmareFuel: Kiguchi's memories of the Burmese jungle in UsefulNotes/WorldWarII could turn anyone into an anti-war activist.

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* NightmareFuel: Kiguchi's memories [[WarIsHell memories]] of the Burmese jungle in UsefulNotes/WorldWarII could turn anyone into an anti-war activist.



** For Indian readers, the novel's fawning descriptions of Indira Gandhi's regime and criticism of Sikh separatists, is this since Indira's regime is highly controversial in India and she conducted many overzealous actions against the Sikh separatists. The novel does get the spirit of the anti-Sikh riots right though, many of which were revenge killings tacitly enabled by the Congress.

to:

** For Indian readers, the novel's fawning descriptions of Indira Gandhi's regime and criticism of Sikh separatists, is this since Indira's regime is highly controversial in India and she conducted many overzealous actions against the Sikh separatists. The novel does get the spirit of the anti-Sikh riots right though, many of which were revenge killings tacitly enabled by the Congress.Congress.
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* {{Anvilicious}}: The book is not remotely subtle in its message that other cultures should be accepted- but given how rampant racism and religious intolerance still ''are'', this may be a [[SomeAnvilsNeedToBeDropped necessary anvil]].

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* {{Anvilicious}}: The book is not remotely subtle in its message that other cultures should be accepted- but given how rampant racism and religious intolerance still ''are'', this may be a [[SomeAnvilsNeedToBeDropped necessary anvil]].accepted.
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Added Namespace


** Ōtsu is a JapaneseChristian, and as such has what he classifies as a very "Japanese" view of God, which does not mesh well with the European Catholics who hold authority over him.

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** Ōtsu is a JapaneseChristian, UsefulNotes/JapaneseChristian, and as such has what he classifies as a very "Japanese" view of God, which does not mesh well with the European Catholics who hold authority over him.
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** It may occur out-of-story to Western readers, who probably won't have the same overzealous fear of anything foreign that some of the characters seem to.

to:

** It may occur out-of-story to Western readers, who probably won't have the same overzealous fear of anything foreign that some of the characters seem to.to.
** For Indian readers, the novel's fawning descriptions of Indira Gandhi's regime and criticism of Sikh separatists, is this since Indira's regime is highly controversial in India and she conducted many overzealous actions against the Sikh separatists. The novel does get the spirit of the anti-Sikh riots right though, many of which were revenge killings tacitly enabled by the Congress.
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Nightmare Fuel hasn't had an octane level for YEARS. (Once more, I find myself wondering how many hidden wicks there are on pages that haven't been edited since 2012...)


* CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming: Several contenders, but Mitsuko's scene in the river near the end probably tops the list.
* HighOctaneNightmareFuel: Kiguchi's memories of the Burmese jungle in UsefulNotes/WorldWarII could turn anyone into an anti-war activist.

to:

* CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming: SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments: Several contenders, but Mitsuko's scene in the river near the end probably tops the list.
* HighOctaneNightmareFuel: NightmareFuel: Kiguchi's memories of the Burmese jungle in UsefulNotes/WorldWarII could turn anyone into an anti-war activist.
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None


* HighOctaneNightmareFuel: Kiguchi's memories of the Burmese jungle in WorldWarTwo could turn anyone into an anti-war activist.

to:

* HighOctaneNightmareFuel: Kiguchi's memories of the Burmese jungle in WorldWarTwo UsefulNotes/WorldWarII could turn anyone into an anti-war activist.



** It may occur out-of-story to Western readers, who probably won't have the same overzealous fear of anything foreign that some of the characters seem to.

to:

** It may occur out-of-story to Western readers, who probably won't have the same overzealous fear of anything foreign that some of the characters seem to.
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This is an In Universe trope. Not a YMMV.


* {{Mondegreen}}: Deliberately used in the text. After a violent riot, Mitsuko asks a nun why she works as a volunteer nurse in such a dangerous time. They're in a very noisy area, such that the answer could be "we have nothing to believe in except for ''this''" or "except for ''[[{{God}} Him]]''"; Mitsuko thinks both are likely answers, but we never learn what was really said.

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