Rating (Out of 5): ~4
Publisher: Seven Seas
Release Date: July 2019
Volumes: 4.
Spoilers?: Light.
Buy it here: Amazon. Barnes and Noble. Book Depository. RightStuf.
Goodreads Synopsis:
HELP OR HINDRANCE?
Tasuku is starting to feel at home at the drop-in center―just in time for him to help a younger student who also hangs out there. Misora Shuji likes to wear girls’ clothing but is unsure about their gender identity. Will Tasuku’s guidance offer Shuji some clarity or just make things harder?
Tasuku is starting to feel at home at the drop-in center―just in time for him to help a younger student who also hangs out there. Misora Shuji likes to wear girls’ clothing but is unsure about their gender identity. Will Tasuku’s guidance offer Shuji some clarity or just make things harder?
Review:
There's a really harsh moment in this volume, just as a warning.
We officially meet Misora, a boy who likes dressing as a girl. This
introduces a new aspect to the story, as Misora states he's not gay,
he just likes dressing as a girl—and also explores the idea of not
really knowing who he is yet. He's younger than Tasuku, and gives
Tasuku a moment to help and be there for someone going through
something similarly difficult.
It all goes down when Tasuku and Misora go out to a festival. Misora
is confronted with a harsh part of being a woman, and he doesn't
quite handle it well—not that anyone should, really. But he reacts
by blowing up at Tasuku, in a very public, harsh way.
I appreciate the point of view that Misora presents here, but I don't
particularly care for the way he talks. He's very brash with his
words, which perhaps Tasuku needs. He blatantly uses the word fag,
and how he treats Tasuku when he freaks out is just not okay. It was
a really hard moment to read.
It also looks like Tasuku's crush is going to do something in the
next volume. It's unclear where he stands on these things, but I
suspect we'll find out soon.
I am really glad that this is being released. I think it's an
important story. Plus, the artwork is gorgeous—I love the
imagination used here. And those color pages at the beginning of this
volume are just gorgeous.
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