Ako and Shiho are now skating buddies and their adventure continues. But they both have a long way to go, and differing skill levels and differing life circumstances mean that they might not be quite as together for much longer.
The fact that I irrationally want to pummel all of Ako’s crappy older friends from middle school and their narrow-minded ways suggests that the writing of this story is working pretty much as intended because they are annoying as heck. And then they turn out to be even more annoying as drunks.
Everybody thinks Ako is weird, but she’s just finding the things in life that matter to her and that’s really kind of important. It might just be my own fondness for leaving the beaten path, but her character arc speaks to me and it’s a no-brainer wanting to see her succeed.
And her age is working against her - Shiho starts to quickly pick up basic moves that Ako struggles with the whole volume and that makes Ako feel like she’s falling even further behind. In a great, great move, she gets some solid reinforcement from her somewhat hopeless boyfriend, indicating that maybe initial impressions of him were off as well.
Otherwise it’s lots of focus on female skaters and a bunch of the characters we already knew, plus the series’ title gets drawn in to the mix in a way that was actually kind of surprising and left me wanting to know more.
The female empowerment angle of this is pretty great. I love the little bios of real life Japanese female skateboarders and how the story shows these characters trying to make their mark. That they do it without a ton of misogyny (though definitely some chauvinism) is a bit of a welcome novelty.
The story’s main problem is that it wants to make darn sure you know all the ins and outs of skate culture, which occasionally translates to feeling like you’re attending a lecture on skateboarding rather than watching somebody learning it more organically.
The art remains good enough to pull off what it’s trying to do, faces can sometimes blend a bit, with occasional moments of delightful ambition. The opening shots of this volume are front loading all the best illustrations here.
That wow moment aside, most of this is pretty straightforward, but in a good way. Nothing to make one run and shove it in the hands of everybody telling them how amazing it is, but it’s a worthwhile story that is incredibly passionate about its subject matter.
3.5 stars - a little bland now and then, but mostly it’s a good sports story that eschews big drama (although the last chapter has a potentially huge moment of reckoning for the awful friends) for a welcome focus on its characters.