Great discussion!
Oh mine, it'd be a lo-o-o-ng post.
I don’t think Youko’s behavior is strange or inconsistent with the other novels. Her character development is progressive. She has her weaknesses and strengths. I think her words to En-Ou were regrettable.
Well, i disagree. My main problem isn't that i simply don't like that the author describes Youko as less than perfect. I don't mind seeing her embarass herself, really. It's simply based on the other novels and so well-explained in anime, Youko, while still unexperienced, is (i repeat myself, i know) a strong, smart and responsible person.
At the beginning of the last novel - i don't find a trace of it in her.
She already've "been there -done that". Remember what she's done to Koukan earlier? When she made decisions without knowing the situation just in order "to cut the Gordian knot"? How guilty she felt afterwards? How she learned the important lesson every ruler should have.
But here, it's like...never happened.
She rushes to help Tai simply because she feels compassionate?! WHY?!!!
Yes, i know that she's a wonderful person and has a good heart and went through a lot, but still...Why to take it so personal?! She never knew Tai-ou and Taiki.
Why she doesn't stop and listen to her advisers, why she doesn't even stop to think of what will happen to Kei if she makes the wrong step? She's responsible for her kingdom and people. But this question never even rise in her thought! Don't you find it strange?
So she feels the sympathy and is eager to help. Understandable! But why to jump on her friend, dear friend, whom she owes her life and throne and accuse him of horrible things? She knows he'd gladly help Tai just as he helped her, so why to treat him like an enemy? Yes, the guy needs a convincing push, but you can do it in a lot of ways, besides, it's like she never considers another options for help.
Really, it's like she's a raging bull who've got this idea of helping Tai and runs with it as if nothing else matters.
Well, maybe i shouldn't go into discussion about conversation i still haven't read. Maybe i'll have another impression about it when reading myself.
Right now my main problem isn't that Youko wants to help Tai.
It's that she want's to help Tai no matter what for no really good reason.
And just being compassionate, having good heart and bla-bla-bla isn't good enough for me. Just being realistic here.
KingofSith
Hi and welcome to the club!
Did you read the novel?
Or you base your posts like me, on the translated part and what the others told?
What i mean is that youko from the first has become a reforming ruler, that is what set her apart from the rest. She has already, in a short period of time, instituted the boldest changes in her kingdom, and she had to fight her way to the throne not once but TWICE. SHe is by no mean the typical ruler of the twelve kingdoms and in there it lies her strenght. Of course she is gonna try to save Tai, it doesnt matter if she never met Tai-ou or Taiki, it is in her nature after the events in the first episodes of the series (the "kill the rat" incident). She questions the regulations and she tries to understand why it works the way it does. And thats not a bad quality, if you look it closely, if you see the other kingdoms, they just say "is the way of the heavens" and thats that. She is the only ruler so far that goes outside the box and ask "why?" and that in itself is courageous.
Yes, you're right. And yes, the thought behind the novel is great.
I have to stress, once again, that i don't find any fault with the most of the story and ideas of the novel in general.
Like this, Risai, desperate "beyond the point"

rushes to Kei because the new Kei-ou is taika to ask for help. Kei-ou is indeed a great person and being young and taika isn't afraid to make reforms and break the stale norms of Twelve kingdoms, is eager to provide help and calls En-ou for help and through him "wakes" the other kingdoms and ultimately the "international" cooperation established, Taiki is saved and cured and goes back to Tai to find Tai-ou.
This is all good and gold.
But the way it's described is a bit unconvincing FOR ME.
It's great that you mention that amazing episode of Youko killing monkey and finding her humanity after the descend into hateful madness.
I am therefore going to argue that Risai is a lot like Youko
You see, it can be quite reminiscent of Risai's behavior now. Youko was very willing to trade "rat's life" for her own. She was very close to killing Rakushun in order to survive. But then she comes to her senses and later, when finding Rakushun she doesn't feel she deserves his freindship. She confesses of her crime to him, being barely able to look him into eyes. She's open and ready to recieve her punishment, that is Rakushun's rejection.
Risai, according to what
fragile_bloom and
nightchaser say about the novel, never does it. Yes, she feels guilty. And that's all?!!!!!!! Why not to come to Youko and confess and ask for forgiveness? She'd forgive her anyway, as she was in her shoes once, but even without knowing it...Risai was quite ready to sacrifice her life for Tai and Youko's life as well. So after Youko helps her all the way and Taiho is back from Hourai...Why not to confront Youko, tell her the truth and pay the consequinces whatever they are, even loosing her head? Why wait for Koukan question her (as late as he does it). Doesn't she owe this to Kei-ou after all?
Please, Taiki can survive now without Risai, really. It's not like her life is so-o-o-o important anymore. And she must know by now that Youko won't kill her for sure, anyway.
Or does she do it it the end and i'm just talking out of my...well, you know!
Risai has already been confronted by her own conscience, En-o, Kei-O, Seiobo and who knows who else.
Yes, she was asked (um, Youko asked her as well?). But why not to have the courage and... (read the above)
she is not thinking like a ruler of a twelve kingdom's kingdom, but a ruler of a hourai nation
You know, this is mentioned also earlier...
Let's get some facts straight. Youko is 16-years old high school student upon leaving Japan. She was never interested in politics and never even understood how the Japanese government worked. This is almost a citate from "The sky at dawn". Her father's "gilrs don't have to win over boys" stigma ruled her life there. I'm more than sure that she wasn't exactly following the international politics either and never participated in any kind of political movement or Greenpeace. Yes, she heard about things here and there, maybe from TV and newspapers, but you're talking about her as if she was some kind of political activist or experienced politician or humanitarian.
She was not.
Besides, only 2 years after, Japan is some "fantasy dream" for her. Forget everything about her 5-6 months inhuman struggle to return home and then sacrificing that dream for the sake of her kingdom. No harm, no loss, "it was a dream". Pretty weird, if you ask me.
So she barely remembers Japan at all now.
I'm telling you, she definitely's gone through some brain surgery.
So, sorry, that still doesn't explain for me her over-heated eargeness for "burn everything down i'm going to help Tai because...because mrs. Ono couldn't find another more convincing device for saving Taiki". It's like in those bad movies when you witness the main hero doing something dumb or knowing something he shouldn't, simply because "this is in the script and the director told me to do this".
but luckily everything turned out okay without any fatalities and the 12 Kingdoms has learned a lesson about international aid without breaking the rules of the heavens.
Yes, everything is great, but why do i have such a sore taste in my mouth? So, goal justify the means? Again that heart-breaking scene with Youko - Does living justify any means? Even if you stop behaving like human being?
I paraphrase, of course, sorry.
When she says that Youko is honest to the point of idiocy, it seems it is not really railing on a friend, but a warning to Risai that not everyone in Youko's court is like that and Risai should keep that in mind. In that same scene Shoukei is asking some very revealing questions as well.
Well maybe you're talking about some other scene from the novel that is still untranslated. In the translated part i felt nothing of the sort. The term "idiotic" comes out of nowhere. Didn't feel that it's a warning for Risai in any way, really. Besides, Shokei isn't the secretary and not that close to Youko yet in her work. She's simply the clerk who writes down everything that happens in the palace. Just because she's Youko friend she can't get some important position so far. She'll have to gather more experience so that Youko would be able to promote her further.