I'm a little distressed to find that this is a continuing series and that volume 2 was not the happy conclusion with their wedding. That's only because I get worried about publication dates and completion status...it looks like volume 3 is out in Japan now, so maybe it'll be in English next year (as of right now, March 2022, it's not up for preorder yet). I sure hope these are selling well enough for Tokypop to continue with the license.
In terms of story, it would've been too soon to wrap up a trip around the world just yet. And there's a lot of really great stuff in this volume.
It's almost like this one in particular was written for me...they go to Finland, Paris, and Venice, so it's like revisiting some of my fondest memories, and making them gay. So...perfection.
I do worry a little bit, too, about how well the writing is going to go from this point on, since these are basically travelogue books, and Sorai's travel must've been put on hold for a while with the pandemic. But some of the material is coming from Sorai's editor, other friends, research, etc, and doesn't all rely on personal firsthand knowledge.
Admittedly sometimes it feels a little too much like a travel book: we always get descriptions of the food, little history lessons, and tours of various famous locations, which could potentially bore some audiences. I personally love it. For the places I've been, it's like a warm reminder (those platforms in flooded Venice!), and it lets me visit other places I haven't had a chance to go to on my own.
And there's wonderful storytelling going on the entire time. Asahi is making so much progress in being more comfortable and confident in his relationship with Mitsuki. They meet a lesbian couple in Finland, and take a step further in coming out (thanks to Asahi) to a friendly couple in Germany, who lets the two of them stay at their house for a while. This section is meaningful, because the husband is German and the wife is Japanese, so Asahi's able to balance his anxieties about being out-and-proud back home in Japan with the heady freedom of traveling among strangers in foreign countries. The more people he meets and the more types of love he experiences, the more he wants to stay with Mitsuki.
It's interesting that when they meet up with Mitsuki's great-aunt (Italian grandfather's younger sister) in Venice, Asahi admits to her that he'd been secretly planning to break up with Mitsuki at the end of their trip, so he could have a bunch of really wonderful memories to hang onto while spending the rest of his life alone. He's really been struggling with the idea of being able to have a happy life while gay and doesn't believe his parents will ever accept it.
But it turns out this elderly relative has some regrets of her own...she bowed to the pressures of family and the not-so-progressive time period and broke up with her girlfriend, the love of her life, to marry a man for appearances' sake. Her advice to Asahi is: don't live with regrets. If Mitsuki makes you happy, grab that happiness with both hands and hold on tight.
Asahi isn't there just yet, but he's getting close. And I'm pretty confident that unless this goes weirdly tragic, we will get that wedding and family acceptance by the end.
There are also some lovely flashbacks, giving more glimpses into their history while leaving some for future volumes. I'm guessing Asahi and Mitsuki had a mutual (presumed unrequited) crush during high school, and when they met during Christmas after their university graduation, something happened to make them realize they could have what they wanted. I'm excited to see more of that story.
It's still not totally clear what Asahi's emergency surgery was (appendix maybe, or something in his stomach/intestines related to stress/overwork), and I'm not sure if there's going to be more to that or not - but it was told really effectively during the Berlin portions, with Asahi panicking over Mitsuki getting sick and collapsing on the street, and finally understanding how terrified Mitsuki must've been of losing him.
This is just such a complex, detailed, well-crafted story, and I hope I can keep traveling with them.