Another notable feature is the way the work engages with spectatorship—both within the narrative world and in relation to its audience. Characters often perform or curate selves for one another, and the text implicates readers in similar acts of consumption. By making performance explicit, Mashiba asks how eroticization and aestheticization transform the people involved: when is appreciation complicit, when is it compassionate? That question lingers after the book is closed, and it is a deliberate, productive discomfort.