
Jellyfish Don't Freeze
About This Novel
The development team of the jellyfish ship, a small spacecraft manufactured by relying on new technologies that "changed the history of human aviation", is conducting flight tests of new models. An accident occurred unexpectedly, and the jellyfish boat crashed into the snowy mountain. In the bad weather, team members waiting for rescue were killed one after another. With nowhere to escape and no survivors, where is the real murderer? The informal police officer Maria and her subordinate Ren Kujo launched an investigation, but encountered interference and obstruction from the military along the way. The shady research on jellyfish boats actually involves a key figure hidden behind the technological revolution...
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(2)Scraped 5d ago
A bit like the steampunk animations I watched when I was a kid
The overall experience was okay, but the description of the police department was a bit naughty, and individual explanations made me a little sleepy.
Readers who like logical reasoning + capturing details to piece together the truth should prefer it. The dual-line narrative structure makes it very tense to read. It creates inconsistencies through information gaps and makes you want to continue reading. There are a lot of professional knowledge (chemistry and aircraft?) That are a little bit mind-boggling, but it should be interesting to dabble in knowledge. In terms of character setting, it's a bit Japanese stylized, maybe I don't like that. The protagonist, the police department, is very charming. The overall feeling is pretty good, except for the final chapter. It's very heavy and the details are overwhelming.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(2)Scraped 5d ago
A bit like the steampunk animations I watched when I was a kid
The overall experience was okay, but the description of the police department was a bit naughty, and individual explanations made me a little sleepy.
Readers who like logical reasoning + capturing details to piece together the truth should prefer it. The dual-line narrative structure makes it very tense to read. It creates inconsistencies through information gaps and makes you want to continue reading. There are a lot of professional knowledge (chemistry and aircraft?) That are a little bit mind-boggling, but it should be interesting to dabble in knowledge. In terms of character setting, it's a bit Japanese stylized, maybe I don't like that. The protagonist, the police department, is very charming. The overall feeling is pretty good, except for the final chapter. It's very heavy and the details are overwhelming.
