Finished Bungaku Shoujo vol. 3. But first, a story.
I'd been visiting local comic book shops recently. These ones have a very wide selection of manga and artbooks and even some light novels (among your regular old comics and foreign comics and stuff) and so I'd been hoping to pick up the new Bungaku Shoujo while I was visiting. One of them had Bungaku Shoujo but didn't have the newest one.
At the other one, I had a conversation with the guy about light novels. It turns out, like we probably suspected, that light novels don't tend to do very well here. In fact, they hadn't stocked Bungaku Shoujo because I was the first person to ask about it. They did have the more popular stuff like Haruhi and Spice and Wolf that also had accompanying anime or manga. Funnily enough, when I got home, I realized that this was the same store where I picked up my Bungaku Shoujo artbook (
"文学少女" Fantasy Art Book).
I don't think I've written that much about Bungaku Shoujo, but really it's first three volumes are fairly similar. I don't think much changes in the way of the overarching plot until the volume that's covered by the movie. Anyhow, each Bungaku Shoujo volume has the Literature Club doing some shenanigans and getting involved in some dark mystery that manages have parallels or ties into a real book.
You might think that's what distinguishes Bungaku Shoujo from other light novel series, but I don't think it is. Personally, I feel like the tie-ins are kind of gimmicky and really heavy handed and for the most part, it connects thematically but doesn't really play out in the plot. Nope, for me, the thing that sets Bungaku Shoujo apart is the crippling emotional problems and immense self-loathing that every single important character except Touko seems to be afflicted with.
And when I say important, I don't mean just the main characters. The characters that show up for a volume who are part of that story are the same. Characters who are introduced earlier and seem normal might show up in a later volume and have it revealed that they've been suffering internally. It turns out that the root of every problem in every volume is self-destructive behaviour of every character that's involved.