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Tsuchi: The Legend of the Black Carp (DIGITAL VERSION)

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$7.99

Must read 🏆

"A fun and mythological tale that immerses you into a universe of courage, wonder, and luminous transformation." —Charisma Enigma, Reedsy

 

In a quiet pond lit only by starlight, every koi sleeps buy one. Tsuchi is different—too dark, too quiet, too full of questions no one else dares. While the school chases sunlight and status, he stares past the reeds, dreaming of a world he's never seen. Then an ancient tortoise whispers a forbidden tale: long ago, a humble carp left this very pond, fought the impossible Great Waterfall, and vanished forever... or so the story goes.

 

What if the legend is real?
What if reaching the top remakes you into something more?

 

Haunted by wonder and a loneliness that aches like an empty current, Tsuchi risks the only home he has ever known.

 

Some journeys demand more than courage.
Some demand everything you are.

 

A luminous, heart-wrenching fable of friendship, sacrifice, and the price of becoming.

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What's included in this zip

This is the digital version of Tsuchi: The Legend of the Black Carp. It contains the pdf and epub version.

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Editorial Review

In The Black Carp, Calvin Le writes with the soft confidence of someone who knows the balance of quiet serenity amidst a world of rushing waterfalls. What begins as a simple tale of an odd, stargazing koi named Tsuchi unfurls into a tale of belonging, personal transformation, and the comfort that can be found by choosing your own path.

 

The novel brings together a wonderfully strange cast: frogs that judge you, moonlight that actually listens, and a koi whose scales glitter with whole constellations. Under all that magic is a story about outcasts and tyrants, about the kind of cruelty people pretend not to see, and the quiet courage of those labeled “weird.” And Tsuchi, with his mix of soft curiosity and sadness, ends up being one of the most surprisingly lovable characters I’ve met this year.

 

The emotional complexity of the pond’s community is where the book really shines. The interactions between the characters feel natural, and the rivalries personal. Calvin Le has this almost Studio Ghibli-esque ability to make a tiny ecosystem feel grand and mythic without losing the intimacy of the tale of one lonely fish who just wants to understand the stars.

 

The novel also features Genbu, the ancient tortoise, whose arrival feels like the world taking a breath. His tale of Akio’s legendary ascent toward the Great Waterfall is so beautifully rendered it practically glows on the page. It’s a story about hope and the terrifying cost of becoming who you’re meant to be. Watching how each koi reacts to it (fear, denial, wonder) offers insight into the truth that we all are presented with choices, and how we choose to respond to those choices creates what becomes the entirety of our lives.

 

The Black Carp is a heartfelt, atmospheric, and unexpectedly moving and enchanting reminder that even the smallest creatures hold the biggest lessons.

 

—Charisma Enigma, Reedsy

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