Of all the works of Takemiya-sensei, this is the story I fell in love with. I can see how she puts her heart on Yamanaka. She is beautifully created. I could see as well how Takemiya-sensei evolved in her storytelling. She uses both, i.e., the rule-of-the-thumb, "show, don't tell" and the road-less-trodden, "tell, don't show". The latter created confusions from readers, I think. However, if you do like what Koveras did, you would appreciate the story, I think. Though, there were things I am not agreeable with, still, the post is still worth the read. With that said, I will not write an in-depth comment since the story is ongoing.
And this is why people only scanlate simple plot A stories that nobody can get confused by: Anything even remotely subtle flies right past many in the audience.
We saw the romantic development. We saw more than most couples in most manga ever get. It just wasn't in your face with a sledgehammer.
The story was perfectly fine, the time skip served its purpose and is a bizarre thing to take issue with when you complain about the story not being "concise" enough, and getting together was plenty climactic because it was cute as fuck.
Yes and more, the story tells that Yamanaka was in love with Taneda even before the time skip. The same way with Taneda, her admiration for Yamanaka turned into love even way before the boyfriend noticed to the point it was already that strong to break it off from him.
Edit: If I may, I encourage others to read Takemiya Jin's works. One of her strong points is her characters. She mostly uses straight-up narration to which I like as well. Girlish sweets has an interwoven individual/couple's stories but it is neatly done and I liked the concept of the ending. An Absurd Relationship and A Song About Missing You created a venue to establish herself as a mangaka who has a wider range of storytelling style.
last edited at Dec 25, 2017 2:04AM