

From the award-winning author of The Tunnel to Summer , the Exit of Goodbyes and Wait For Me Yesterday in Spring comes a brand-new light novel about setting aside differences to solve the mystery of a world frozen in time. Socially awkward loner Kayato has an intense fear of being touched and finds making friends extremely difficult. When he and his high school classmates visit Hakodate for a field trip, he suffers through some attempts to engage with the others, until... Time stops for the entire world, but not for him. All the hustle and bustle of the city fades into an eerie veil of silence, leaving him the only soul left in motion--until he finds another in Akira, a sharp-tongued local delinquent. Though she's his total opposite, she begrudgingly agrees to help him solve the mystery. Their only lead is something Kayato's uncle said just before he died about a "world plucked out of time," as if preserved in amber. Hoping to find a clue among his late uncle's possessions in Tokyo, the two teens must travel through the frozen world. Review: Please read - It was so good like the ending had me in awe also I learned a lot of new words reason this book it was just really great all around Review: Wonderful characters - I am a huge fan of Mei's other works, wait for me yesterday in Spring is definitely my favorite. But the attachment i made to the characters in this book is unparalleled. I highly recommend it
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,073,111 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #2,643 in Time Travel Fiction #5,163 in Science Fiction Short Stories #12,714 in Science Fiction Crime & Mystery |
| Customer Reviews | 4.9 out of 5 stars 38 Reviews |
G**D
Please read
It was so good like the ending had me in awe also I learned a lot of new words reason this book it was just really great all around
R**N
Wonderful characters
I am a huge fan of Mei's other works, wait for me yesterday in Spring is definitely my favorite. But the attachment i made to the characters in this book is unparalleled. I highly recommend it
K**R
Definitely not the best in the seasons series, but still really good.
The book was great. As usual, the writing by Mei Hachimoku would suck you in. The connection between Mugino and Akira is probably the best connection out of all the oneshot novels by Mei Hachimoku so far, at least in my opinion. My only complaint of the book is that it feels SO cut-short with the way it transitioned into the ending because of something so minuscule. However, I did like the way it ended.
B**O
peakest book
peak book
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