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The Immortal Girls Nursery Travelogue -

Every immortal girl has a doll. Some dolls are porcelain, some are shadow, one is a dried apple with a face drawn in squid ink. In the Doll Hospital—a converted linen closet that opens onto an infinite corridor—the girls perform surgeries that last centuries. A missing button eye becomes a relic. A torn seam becomes a legend. The oldest doll, Clothilde, has been restitched so many times that none of her original fabric remains. She is, the girls say, more herself than ever .

The Immortal Girls’ Nursery Travelogue (often associated with the Japanese title Fushi no Musume no Hoiku Kikou ) is a striking example of how modern web literature subverts the "slice-of-life" genre by layering it over a foundation of cosmic indifference and eternal scale. On the surface, it presents as a whimsical journey; beneath, it is a profound meditation on the burden of longevity and the nature of caretaking. The Premise of Eternal Transit the immortal girls nursery travelogue

Age 12 (physically). Actual age: 800.

A recurring plot point involves the consequences of her journey. Because she carries "immortal genes," the offspring she produces with various monsters are significantly more powerful, causing ecological chaos and forcing other characters to hunt her down to stop the spread of these "enhanced" threats. Every immortal girl has a doll