The World Behind The Arch follows the story of Griffith and his classmates who, after being taken to a fantastic world by a strange light, part ways based on their convictions, with some wanting to return to their world, others, be able to live in the best possible way and that of the rest to take it all in stride and venture out into the world to have fun.
It follows from the above that the role of Griffith drags into the background so that the story focuses more on two of his companions, Ziz and Garudo, two boys who have questionable ethics and morals and lack or have very little empathy for others, which causes that their trip around the world to become a cycle of degeneration in which they do something that ends up bringing endless pain and suffering for themselves and those around them.
If you like black humor and sordid stories, thia is your story, from the first line the author gives you to understand that no type of censorship will tale place in the book, the writing can be improved, however, the dialogues are realistic, in every moment they give you the feeling that you are witnessing the conversatoon between several teenagers, and that is something that attracts me, and something that no many are capable of achieving, on the other hand, the characters have their own personality and desires, and although it seems that they do not evolve from the starting point, in what I haver read I have been able to appreciate significant changes in several of then, on the other hand, the world in which they are is not very striking, and it's rather cliché, the most remarkable about it is the question of wheter they are really in a videogame world or not, since it's necer clarified.