I hate it when people speak for others without their knowledge. It’s such a self serving thing to do.
Yeah, the irony is that the sister is doing exactly what she's accusing Saki of doing - using her relationship with her sister to feel better about herself because she's "protecting" her, despite Kanon neither needing nor, likely, wanting that help. Especially when it involves harassing Kanon's closest friend. You get the feeling that the "heart reading" bit is just a self-serving lie, and she'd be like this no matter who Kanon was spending time with.
Why doesn't Kanon let her into her room? Or ever mention her? Probably because Kanon is avoiding her control-freak sister. The sister doesn't know Saki well enough to read her body language in a believable way, so it's just interrogation tactics and arrogance. I guess people are right that Kanon may be able to read a lot or be in denial about Saki's feelings.
I always hate this character archetype, because it exists to basically only serve as an obstacle and rarely tells us much about the main characters. [...]
The situation also came up out of nowhere with a character not hinted at, and because Kanon is direct and lays down the law the situation should reach a turning point immediately. So no lengthy Pride and Prejudice-era or A Silent Voice shenanigans. But the rush makes me wonder just how long this manga is intended to run. On the bright side we're seeing a version of "stay away from my family" that highlights both someone disabled being infantilized and another person being LGBT and afraid of being discovered. But it's more of a novelty here than intersectionality like fear of being misunderstood and rejected as a minority, from earlier. Reading into it, I guess it may be a crossroads of tropes.
If this situation leads to Saki feeling forced to reveal she likes women, in the first outright statement of the words in the story, it better be worth the sudden hackneyed setup. I'm sure Kanon will be MVP next chapter.
last edited at May 8, 2022 4:59PM