The character in question, which I'm assuming is Serval, is from the town Webberton, which does this rather queer mix between Communist and Nazi ideals. The whole "She's not a villain" is that she's just doing her job and enforcing what she feels are her true ideologies. After all, everyone is a hero in their own story. What villain ever really truly feels that they're being a villain?
I was unaware that people were capable of digesting basic literary fiction themes, but I guess because Perri doesn't explictly say "YES, SERVAL IS EVIL" that must mean she obviously supports their ideas.
Good Lord don't ever read anything that strides away from basic black-and-white thinking - or else you might think the wrong thing of the author!
The character in question, which I'm assuming is Serval, is from the town Webberton, which does this rather queer mix between Communist and Nazi ideals. The whole "She's not a villain" is that she's just doing her job and enforcing what she feels are her true ideologies. After all, everyone is a hero in their own story. What villain ever really truly feels that they're being a villain?
I was unaware that people were capable of digesting basic literary fiction themes, but I guess because Perri doesn't explictly say "YES, SERVAL IS EVIL" that must mean she obviously supports their ideas.
Good Lord don't ever read anything that strides away from basic black-and-white thinking - or else you might think the wrong thing of the author!