![]() ![]() ![]() Compared to other works I have read from Yokoyama, it is quite a bit longer, with more dialogue, though whatever the friends say to each other are mostly observations anyone could make themselves of what is going. The way I think of it is that it is more like the geometrical Mondrian than the watercolors of Renoir, just to make an obvious contrast. On an emotional continuum of its effects, it would be very cold, definitely not warm. Visually, it's mechanical and abstract, black and white drawing. ![]() But it's mainly a fantasy of a continuous journey into the mind's complex pathways. Sometimes there are actually flowers and trees, too. A group of friends-humanoids? Oddly and futuristically dressed characters?-clearly in some fantasy of the future, explore a "garden" made of machines, geometric forms and all sorts of objects. ![]()
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