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BookDragon Blog

29 Apr / At Night, I Become a Monster by Yoru Sumino, illustrated by loundraw, translated by Diana Taylor [in Booklist]

He’s “something like a six-legged beast made of pure darkness,” but come morning, he’s back to being “too serious” middle-schooler Adachi. More observer than participant among his peers, he keeps silent as the class pariah, Yano, is bullied almost daily. When a few boys, claiming to have spotted a monster lurking nearby, invite Adachi along to help hunt and capture it, he feigns much-needed sleep.

One night, he returns to school in his monstrous state, intending to pick up his forgotten homework. He’s shocked to find Yano taking a “midnight break” – the only time she can be at school without being targeted. Despite his beastly form, she recognizes him almost instantly, and their nightly encounters become a regular habit, totally separate from what happens during the day – until their two worlds collide.

Bestselling author Yoru Sumino’s latest “light novel” – a Japanese genre of prose stories meant to appeal to teen fans of manga and anime – might veil serious issues with a seemingly carefree tone (breezily anglicized by Diana Taylor), but he deftly succeeds in unmasking the real monsters.

Review: “Books for Youth,” Booklist, April 15, 2020

Readers: Middle Grade, Young Adult

Published: 2016 (Japan), 2020 (United States)

By SIBookDragon in Fiction, Japanese, Middle Grade Readers, Repost, Translation, Young Adult Readers Tags > At Night I Become a Monster, BookDragon, Booklist, Bullying, Coming-of-age, Diana Taylor, Friendship, Horror/Ghost story, Identity, School challenges, Yoru Sumino
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