With the Yumimimi Festival quickly approaching, preparations have the shrine and town in a flurry. One particular shut-in elf and her quick-to-mature miko are hoping to use some old-fashioned superstitions in their favor. From divination and charms for luck to family crests and duty, the pair are deep into some shrine history, and with the festival overflowing, who could predict what they'd get up to!
The problem with gentle, slice-of-life series is that every so often it's too easy to see them as just plain boring. There's a whole chapter here dedicated to carbonation machines and carbonated beverages. Yuuuuuuup. Another chapter has a bored character trying to make a big deal out of a missing toy and admitting in the end the resulting shenanigans were "not super interesting."
A good rule of thumb when writing: don't let the characters point out how boring the story is in the actual story.
I have another volume on hand from the library. Here's hoping it will be super interesting.
There's some mild male gaze on Koma's chest in this volume, something which I hadn't noticed before and which I hope doesn't get more egregious as we go along. Other than that, the infotainment factor has just the right amount of detail to not bog down the gentle comedy of these short stories.
Next volume looks like it will start with a "baby" episode, which I'm not all that excited about. Maybe they'll talk about baby-rearing in the Edo period and make it easier to tolerate.
Really enjoying another volume of 'Otaku Elf' - we get an archery training montage, a mock court case, and exploding fizzy drinks! The series continues to be good light fun, with a sprinkling of history, and I'm very excited about the anime adaptation that's starting up this April; I hope it's got some of the melancholy edge I've loved.