Summer is here and that’s a dead giveaway that the beach is upon us. Besieged by rivals and bullies on all sides, Uka’s about to learn what having a life is really like, but it’s a mere prelude to her growing up and somebody else being hellbent against it.
Phew. Light drama and then high drama marks this instalment of this very good shojo about a girl who thinks she’s plain and the boy who won’t let her because he knows how special she is.
There’s something about this story that manages to do really well for itself, even though I am still no great fan of the art style. Despite that, it gets the job done and the writing handily carries the rest.
While you won’t be surprised to see Serina show up in a bikini, the story doesn’t have some amazing reveal of Uka that it plans to spring on Kai or her classmates. No, it keeps things strictly in character by having her just not own one - why would she, when she never expected to have fun with friends? It’s a good choice.
This entire beach section really goes a lot harder on plot points than it does the eye candy, which is a welcome twist on things. The friendship born of rivalry between Serina and Uka is just the cutest thing. Yeah, I don’t think Serina needed to want Kai back, but I get the unfinished business of it all. Which gets pretty settled this chapter anyway in satisfactory fashion.
And there’s tons for Uka to do on her own, as she stands up to the bullies who were all over her in an earlier volume. It’s a little odd to see bullies actually face repercussions rather than becoming sports heroes or senators, but I will allow it and the way Uka handles herself here is not what you’re probably expecting.
Which leaves us with Kai and his own thoughts on Uka, which become pretty clear. He doesn’t necessarily seem to want to acknowledge them just yet, but he’s very much made a choice. I love the way Serina sums up the difference between her and Uka towards the end of this section.
The next chapter is basically an excuse for Kai and Uka to be terribly cute (sorry Kai, your posturing amuses me). It’s an extension of how they work - Kai gives Uka the support she needs, with minimal pressure and doing it for her, and she just becomes a stronger person and takes charge of her life for a change. There’s even a little bonus Ayumi fleshing out for good measure.
Uka’s realizing she can be herself, not the person people have told her she is, and that’s an important step in anybody’s life. Look, if I can internally cheer over asking for flipping contact info, the manga’s doing something really right.
The back portion will probably prove more divisive, as it turns out that Uka’s a real daddy’s girl, at least in her father’s eyes, so when she actually ends up having a life at this second choice school, it really triggers his protective urges.
It’s the most selfish extension of parental love - he thinks Uka’s being corrupted by her friends and bullied by her class, so he must save her, despite what she actually wants. And when it turns out that he didn’t even know the hell that was her middle school, it’s clear that he’s protecting an ideal more than anything.
Still, he only wants her happy and safe, he just won’t listen to anybody. The story takes pains to make him not completely unlikeable, although I debate how effective it is because I couldn’t stand his ‘I know best’ attitude and tendency to stick his nose in way, way over the line.
But, it’s a point in favour of the series that I really thought this was done about as well as it could be, even if it’s a bit much for my own tastes. And the moments scattered throughout, including Kai’s debut as a second-story man, are worth the ride.
I can’t see the resolution to this not devolving into utter schmaltz, but this story has more than earned the benefit of the doubt and there’s no denying that it handled the first part of the father arc a bit better than I was expecting.
4 stars - fantastic first half, decent second half. We’ll just let it sit right in the middle between based on that, but this is still a highly recommended series and I’m pretty stoked that it’s going to be getting an anime.