Maria Levato Maria Levato

Nerdology 101: The Return of “Kakuriyo: Bed and Breakfast for Spirits”

Welcome back to Nerdology 101: The blog where I rant about random stuff and you rave because it’s just so fun! I’m your weekly ranter, Maria Levato. Indie author, fellow nerd, and this week? A very happy anime watcher.

This paragraph contains light spoilers for Season 1 of the anime. If you haven’t watched it and want to be surprised, don’t read it. If you aren’t familiar with Kakuriyo: Bed and Breakfast for Spirits, it’s an anime that originally aired in 2018. It follows Aoi, a young lady who was taught to cook for the yokai pallatte by her grandfather. One day, after her grandfather’s death, an ogre named Ōdanna appears at her home. He swoops her up and carries her off to his realm where he informs her that her grandfather owes a substantial debt to him. As collateral for the debt, her grandfather offered her. To recoup his losses, Ōdanna wants Aoi to marry him. Being a strong-minded person, Aoi refuses and insists that he allow her to work off the debt. To accomplish this, she opens a small restaurant where she serves her food to the yokai staying at his inn. While she struggles at first, she finds her way and eventually her great cooking and kind personality gain her customers and allies in this new world. Still, she grows closer to Ōdanna day by day. End Potential Spoilers.

Now, with Season 2 finally coming out, I’m stoked to see where they end up. Beyond that, the return of Kakuriyo is giving me so much hope for the return of other animes. As we’ve seen in recent years, a lot of them are making comebacks. From Bleach: Thousand Year Blood War to Fairy Tail: 100 Year Quest, and even Black Butler: Public High School and Emerald Witch, many are returning. This phenomenon is hardly a new concept in anime—or any medium for that matter. The difference with Kakuriyo, though, lies in the fact that aside from Fruits Basket, this isn’t happening with romance anime at quite the same frequency.

While I love anime from many genres, romance has a special place in my heart (Duhh. I’m a romantasy author). Beyond the normal stuff all millenials watched that none of us are likely to have recognized as anime at the time (Pokemon, Yu-Gi-Oh, Beyblades, etc), my first intentional consumption of an anime was another beloved romance anime, Inuyasha (and that burn burned about as slow as a burn could burn), which inspired the priestesses in my writing. Since that time, some of my favorite anime have been romance anime. There are so many I’d love to see return. Special A, The Forbidden Academy, and so many others all deserve the same treatment. Don’t even get me started on the way I need more Maid-Sama. I’d love to see more of Misa and Usui. My hope is that we see more of all of these, especially given that Kakuriyo is thriving in this new season. I. Am. OBSESSED.

What animes would you like to see make a comeback? Are there any more that you’ve heard of potentially getting “Fruits Basket treatment”? Let me know in the comments! I’ll see you back next Friday at 3P.M. ET for the third segement of Nerdology 101. Until then, have a nerdy week!

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Maria Levato Maria Levato

Nerdology 101: Don’t Just Say the Weird Thing, Ask the Weird Questions.

A Blog on All Things Nerdy

Hiya! Welcome to my new blog, Nerdology 101, where we explore all things nerdy. I’m Maria. My professional bio can be found on the homepage, but here, I’ll give you the fun version.

 

I’m a playful, goofy person who’s weird neither starts nor ends at her public persona. I embrace all the quirks so please be prepared to bring your weirdest to my comment section. My nerdy qualifications involve a plethora of books, anime, and historical/mythological/scientific/philosophical rabbit holes and it’s a list longer than any textbook you’ve ever seen. Here’s a few basics, though. Favorite authors: Amber V. Nicole, Harley Laroux, Xiran Jay Zhao, H.D. Carlton, etc. Favorite animes: Fairy Tail (guild mark tattooed on thigh), Inuyasha, Yu-Gi-Oh, Pokemon, Record of Ragnarok, Bleach, Naruto, and My Happy Marriage. Philosophy, history, and mythology are all kind of one big hobby for me. I’m fascinated with culture and the way humans think/function, so I research all three. I’ve focused on cultures from around the world at different points, but Japanese, Egyptian, and Greek, and Norse are the ones I’m best versed in.

 

Now that you know a bit about me, let’s get into some NERDOLOGYYYYY! (please read that in hype voice with alarms sounding in the background).

 

This week's topic is: Ask the weird thing. With the trend on social media telling us to “say the weird thing,” I want to encourage people to ask the weird questions. Weird questions tend to lead to weird information and any good nerd knows that knowing weird stuff is our area of expertise. My most recent weird question involved a scene I was writing where, for reasons most likely attributed to creative sadomasochism and a need to track power scaling, I decided I needed to know the answer to a hypothetical math/science question with little to no basis in reality. So, you know what I did? I asked. Amazingly enough, I got an answer from a scientist willing to indulge hallucinations affiliated with my profession and I now know how many joules a random tsunami crashing out of the sky would generate. The information is otherwise useless to me outside of the context of what my brain tells me I need to know in order to write the scene, but what’s more nerdy than otherwise useless information?

 

As another example, I'll bring up someone I admire—someone who built her entire career off of asking the weird thing—Dr. Esmé Louise James (@esme.louisee on IG). She’s a sex historian who wrote a book titled Kinky History. As you may have guessed, sex history isn’t a major offered at most colleges (or any, to my knowledge). But she always asked the weird thing and ended up crafting a field perfectly suited to her niche interest. This led her to a career she’s passionate about and a slew of interesting information that few have taken the time to learn. Thanks to that career, she's been able to cultivate similar interests in sex history in other people and find a following of people who love her work almost as much as she does. To me, Dr. James is a nerdy shero deserving of every bit of success she’s built.

 

Asking the weird thing is the key to nerdiness. The way we become absorbed in our interests—allowing them to consume our soul—makes us who we are as people. For that reason, I encourage everyone to be open-minded and to ask the questions that seem strange, or even socially unacceptable. So, who are your nerdy sheroes/heroes? Do you have any weird questions you want to ask, or have asked and want to share? Let me know in the comments and make sure you come back next Friday at 3P.M. for the next segment of Nerdology 101. Have a nerdy week!

This post was made with the permission of Dr. James’s manager, Ben Grand, at Stage Addiction. If you’re interested in Dr. James or her work, please see her website.

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