Spring has come again and Akari now welcomes the start of her second year on Aqua. In the spirit of new beginnings, Akari sees a mysterious woman with a spectacular voice while helping the company president run some errands. Who is this person and what does she have to do with Alice? A fateful encounter, perhaps?
Kozue Amano (天野こずえ Amano Kozue) is a female Japanese manga artist. She is widely known as the creator of Aria, which proved to be a best-selling hit, and was adapted into an anime television series consisting of 3 seasons and an OVA.
Still the wonderful ambling slice-of-life through Neo Venice.
The only complaint I have is some art inconsistencies with the night scenes. Every few panels, they forget to make the sky dark and so it suddenly looks like daytime. Not too big a deal, all things considered.
I just absolutely love this series. It seems to calm me down when I am at my most stressed, cheer me up when I'm blue... I believe I have made my point. I think I have found what I want to start adding to my Christmas wishlist.
I love that we got a chapter with Alice! She can be so reserved, and graceful when rowing, so seeing this childish goofy side of her was a highlight of the volume. The fireworks chapter was great too, very pretty and seeing more of our Gnome friend Albert was a joy.
I'm getting more used to the Aria series' slow pace, but so little of note happened in this volume that it was almost painful to read. There were more references to consumption and weight than there have been in any of the previous volumes. There was still some beautiful art, though, so towards the end I mostly skimmed or skipped the dialogue and just focused on the visuals.
Love it! I'm so sad to be closing in on the last translated volume though. It did bug me that on the back it says spring when it's fall... how was that not caught??? But now an even deeper insight into training and friendship, and as alwats beautiful art.
Another gorgeous volume of Aria. Plus, new characters! And more insight into undine training and how Neo-Venezia works. Now, if only Tokyopop's release schedule of this series wasn't criminally slow.