Lawrence is a traveling merchant in Spice & Wolf who’s received a proposition from someone to buy information on upcoming changes in the precious metal content of a type of silver coin; the cost is a relatively small fixed fee plus a cut of the profits if the information is accurate. Holo, the eponymous “wisewolf,” is essentially telling Lawrence that he has a dominant strategy.
It’s nowhere near as good as MoR in a LW sense, not as good as “The Cambist and Lord Iron” at teaching economics through fiction, and you would not find it an intellectual challenge in any sense, but in the general context of Japanese light novels, it’s good, I think.
(At $8 and what I remember of your comments, I would give 60% odds you would not regret the purchase, and 5-10% you’d like it ‘quite a bit’ or something along those lines. If you do buy it, please tell me before you finish so I can register this as a prediction on PredictionBook.com.)
I’d probably understand that better if I knew the context.
Lawrence is a traveling merchant in Spice & Wolf who’s received a proposition from someone to buy information on upcoming changes in the precious metal content of a type of silver coin; the cost is a relatively small fixed fee plus a cut of the profits if the information is accurate. Holo, the eponymous “wisewolf,” is essentially telling Lawrence that he has a dominant strategy.
Agreed. I have no clue what it means. I saw Spice & Wolf on the manga shelf in Borders… is it worth reading?
It’s nowhere near as good as MoR in a LW sense, not as good as “The Cambist and Lord Iron” at teaching economics through fiction, and you would not find it an intellectual challenge in any sense, but in the general context of Japanese light novels, it’s good, I think.
(At $8 and what I remember of your comments, I would give 60% odds you would not regret the purchase, and 5-10% you’d like it ‘quite a bit’ or something along those lines. If you do buy it, please tell me before you finish so I can register this as a prediction on PredictionBook.com.)