Most of the time, I brush it off as a cultural difference…however…that teacher was a creep. I find that there’s always pieced of Japanese manga that are strange and questionable. It’s kind of hard to explain, but it was really flow-y? The lines were really fluid I guess, which is something I’m not used to when it comes to manga. It’s not that I didn’t like it, it was just kind of hard to get used to. Asumiko Nakamura is an acclaimed manga creator known in English for Utsubora: The Story of a Novelist and her contribution to the Neo Parasyte f anthology, but. It was cute, it was fast paced and I really enjoyed reading this one! I mean the love story is literally the entire plot that spans over the three volumes with little hiccups along the way, as any relationship would have. This manga tells the love story of two teenagers discovering themselves and honestly, it was adorable. For two students who had never before had a real conversation, what does the future hold now that they are constantly together? Follow these boys as they experience excitement, betrayal, depression, and love that unyielding, crazy, poignant, and fantastical kind of love. Hikaru always thought his classmate Rihito was kind of a snob, until he stumbles across Rihito secretly practicing a song in an empty classroom. Due to some extenuating circumstances, he is now being tutored by one of the many school idiots, Hikaru “Beyan” Kusakabe. Rihito Sajou, a hyperventilating overachiever, winds up attending a high school where the only requirement for graduation is knowing how to write your name.
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