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ADAPTATIONS:
𝗠𝗮𝗻𝗵𝘂𝗮. No release date yet as of writing, but here are some sneak peeks from last year! They are heartbreakingly beautiful!
The manhua will be serialized on Kuaikan: https://t.co/o8sSvnXbPy
𝗪𝗵𝗲𝗿𝗲 𝘁𝗼 𝗿𝗲𝗮𝗱:
English edition (Peach Flower House)
▪️ https://t.co/1Ll5JvyEz8
▪️ https://t.co/qsvu9J7eQL
Replete with philosophies about faith, fate, kindness, redemption, and salvation, #LittleMushroom is—at its heart—an intricately written love letter to humanity.
#小蘑菇 #一十四洲
Though bleak in tone and themes, Little Mushroom isn't really that dark all through out. In fact, it's shot through with a whimsical kind of comedy and occasional fluff—a blend that, under Shisi's adept pen, just perfectly works.
Loving where there isn't supposed to be love is a largely subversive act. When Lu Feng (a xenogenic-killer) loved An Zhe (a xenogenic), it already sparked an implicit revolution of its own, subtly burning the lines separating species that deserve to live and those that don't.
With Lu Feng, we see a figure of authority who precariously straddles the line between hero and villain—and someone who doesn't care about what people will classify him as. His existence asks: will morals hold weight in a world that loses meaning as it teeters to destruction?
An Zhe's innocent character provides us an unprejudiced vantage point. From there we get amplified answers to the questions we carry throughout the book: are we really no different from the beasts we're so afraid of? If so, what will it take for us to be worthy of redemption?
Amidst this dystopian landscape, a sentient mushroom obtains human form and embarks on a journey to retrieve his stolen spore—unwittingly weaving his destiny not only with that of the land's best Judge, but also with the rest of humanity in the process.