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Loading... The Seven Deadly Sins 3 (Seven Deadly Sins, The) (edition 2014)by Nakaba Suzuki (Author)
Work InformationThe Seven Deadly Sins, Volume 3: The Heroes' Past by Nakaba Suzuki
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. I'm still not convinced this series has what it takes to keep my interest all the way through. I can see places where the author has contrived quick fixes to plot holes, where characters make confusing or unnecessary decisions, and the behavior devolves into simplicity or the as-yet-unexplained. Still, there are overarching plot-lines beginning to form, new characters in each installment, and the artwork remains charming and unique. It's peculiarly rough, with huge contrasts between the sketchy but intricate backgrounds, and flattened, disproportionate characters. It sort of gels together - for now. At least the world is picaresque, and there is enough action to speed things up. no reviews | add a review
Belongs to Series
Inside Baste Prison, Meliodas has an explosive reunion with Ban, the Fox Sin of Greed. However, trouble is on the horizon as their journey continues. Another member of The Seven Deadly Sins appears and is dead set on punishing Ban. The heroes clash as a feud is revived from their past! No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)741.5The arts Graphic arts and decorative arts Drawing & drawings Cartoons, Caricatures, ComicsLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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The relationship between Elizabeth and Diane seems to improve. The moment in the beginning where she tells Elizabeth that she still matters because she can touch people’s hearts was one of my favorites.
We meet King, who turns into a kid. He's aligned with the holy knights involuntarily, but not as a hostage.
We learned Ban killed Elaine, the spirit of the Fountain of Youth. It just so happens that she was King’s sister. He harbored an intense dislike for Ban despite being in the same group.
Maybe Book 4 can explain it? By explaining King's fight with Ban in this way, the author enables the reader to sympathize with King in Book 4.
There are too many things happening on each page for my liking. A lot of times, it interferes with the flow of the story. The complexity of the fight scenes makes it hard to appreciate them fully. Apart from that, interesting reading. ( )