This volume of Kageki Shojo!! has a framing story where Sarasa takes Ai along with her to her home in Asakusa for summer break. The main part of the book is devoted to Sarasa and Akiya's childhoods in the shadow of the Misato-ya kabuki troupe.
As I am reading along in the "main" part of this series--actually a continuation of a series that started its run in one manga magazine in Japan, and then moved to a different one when the first magazine folded--I keep thinking back to that initial portion, and imagining its having a thorough rewrite or rehaul to reflect its (in my opinion) much stronger later parts. Can't be helped. I can only say to those who aren't all that impressed with "The Curtain Rises" that it does get a lot better!
For example, this volume deals with some fairly serious topics, just as "The Curtain Rises" does, but handles them with a lot more subtlety and nuance. Adults' mistakes--whether in parenting overall, or in specific instances like an adulterous affair--changing, or even ruining their children's sense of stability and well-being, is one example. Some it is resolved too neatly, though. I suspect that many, or even most, overbearing soccer or gymnast or drama etc. parents never realize how much their controlling behavior negatively affects their kids. Or if they do, they don't make an overt apology or confession to the child.
But overall, I liked this volume a lot. Asakusa is shown with a good amount of detail, and not a little nostalgia. Everyone in the flashbacks has visibly aged between then and the girls' visit, and you can see the oldest generation gently and gradually fading as a new, vibrant generation comes up. Ai is introduced to kabuki... and doesn't really get it. :D Sarasa's relationship with Akiya is given some additional background, but their current situation is still not clear, at least from Ai's point of view.
Speaking of Ai, I could have stood to see more of her experiences in Asakusa. She's obviously a visitor, and a stranger to the tight-knit community surrounding (or keeping its distance from, in some cases) Misato-ya. Her best friendship with Sarasa is still in its early stages, but I like how low-key and lived-in it feels.
It's nice to read a shoujo manga that isn't laser-focused on romance and/or high school life. This story wouldn't be as good, I think, if Sarasa and Akiya's relationship was laden with hormones and melodrama. This is a current favorite, and I'm looking forward to reading more. How is it that a 160-page manga volume feels so small compared to a 180-page one, though? One of life's mysteries.