
Remember children, consent through fear, through pressure, through fear of abandonment and so on IS NOT TRUE CONSENT. That's called marital (in this case) rape, and yes, even if the sex is good
It's an historical piece and it's quite romanticized so it's alright, but never forget that in real life, consent should be FREELY GIVEN & WITHOUT COERCION (and ethusiastic)

I know right?? I sometimes think that such stories shoud, you know, have a prelude/preface/thingie where the author takes the time to explain such important distinction, because some readers can be very impressionable! I know it is done more and more in fanfictions, maybe it could spread to manga too!

This story is veeeery well done! usually in isekai we know immediately exactly what happened in MC's past live, if she was loves, betrayed, hated and so on. And that's it, that's the end, the past is the past and we never know more of it. In this story, we thought, just like Shuli, that she was hated by everyone, that her family didn't love her and that she was completely alone until the very end. Like Nora said, she was unaware of the loving people by her side even until her death, and that's the saddest thing ever. But what is impressive in this story is that we, the reader, also didn't know anything! We really were in her perspective, so the revelation of the last few chapters is quite a chock. This is also my first time reading an isekai that shows what happened AFTER the death of MC, it just makes it all the more good!!!
So I've been reading the last raw chapters of S1 (and not understing them lmao), and there's something I always been curious if someone can answer ٩(๑❛ᴗ❛๑)۶
So, Seth is a red-hair (I don't know if it's historically correct), but I heard in some of my classes wayyy back that red-haired where, well maybe cursed is too strong a word, but not well seen at least? Does it have relevance in this story? I couldn't help but notice that the gods are surprised by Seth "true appareance", the Greek (?was he greek?) god in particular, hence my curiosity (✿◡‿◡)
Yes, it does. What your professor said is true.