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Joy 2022-10-26 01:33:23

i feel a little bit hooked by this story, well written ,delicate, and somehow realistic. I
feel that the characters in it all have metaphors. In fact, the two heroines represent the marginal groups in reality that are not understood and accepted by the mainstream,
just like insects. This kind of weird hobby reflects weird sexual orientations. For example, the father of No. 2 female is expressing the
attitude of the family of a marginalized person towards his daughter. He sent mutated bugs to poison the heroine so that his daughter would not be obsessed with No. 1 female. The
vicious practice of harming others and not oneself expresses a cowardly and distorted rejection psychology, while the landlady represents the attitude of ordinary people in society to marginalized people. Her so-called 'protecting' granddaughter
from the poison of LES is a good illustration of this. She expressed this point. Fear and contempt, but at the same time, she takes a non-active attitude. She usually just turns a blind eye until the two kisses are met by her granddaughter before issuing an expulsion order. What's interesting is that her granddaughter represents a very open attitude. Serious and
very ironic, in a cultural atmosphere that regards LES as a beast of a flood Reborn? The ending is very good.
Female 2 turned into a worm because of female 1, and female 1 also became a worm, and then the male research institute came to be killed by female 2. Does it indicate the rejection of males in feminism? In the end, the two lead a happy life with baby

bugs. They were ruined by bugs, and they were also fulfilled

. The reproductive capacity of bugs is quite amazing and some are a good metaphor for single female reproduction such as queen bees.

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Extended Reading

Masters of Horror quotes

  • Walker: [first lines to a run over rattler] You're not done yet!

  • Jim Wheeler: [to a bound captive] I never get involved in another man's work.