Having adored the Berrybrook series by Chmakova, a friend recommended I read her earlier work Dramacon. So I did. And here goes.
Dramacon centers around Christie, an aspiring manga author, and her experiences at a major comic convention over three years. Volume 2 has her attending with a new artist and friend at her side, meeting new friends and rivals, and encountering old ones. Things don't work as smoothly as she'd like though, either personally or professionally.
While it is still very enjoyable, it's definitely her earlier piece. The art, especially in vol. 1, is much busier, like a lot of manga artists in their early works. Much more background, more panels on a page, more chibi reactions... just more. There are some cliches stuck in, and the pacing can be a little rushed. It calms down as the series progresses, as Chmakova gains experience, and makes for a bit easier read. That isn't to say the art or the story is bad - not at any rate! There are some great funny moments, some good visual gags, and Christie's interactions with Matt carry a lot of emotion. Christie grows up a lot at her cons, becoming a lot more assured in what she's aiming for. It's just not quite as polished a read as the Berrybrook series. Still definitely worth the read though!
That being aid, you start to see Chmakova develop her skills a lot here. The art mellows, as I said, but you also start seeing shades of Berrybrook. While the first volume was a little more superficial, here we start getting into ideas of growing up - what we want versus what's expected, of race, and of relationships - not everything goes smoothly or according to our hopes and sometimes we have to make choices about what we really want (yes, this one's a love triangle volume).
You really need to read all 3 to get the whole story. Volume 1 can kinda stand on its own, but it's not the most satisfying of endings - more 'coming of age and first potential step for the future' than an actual closure. Over the next two years (volumes 2-3), you see Christie grow, figure out what she wants with both her professional and personal lives (i.e. her comics and her relationship with cosplayer Matt). By the time volume 3 closes, while it's still not a concrete ending, its a much more satisfying one.
I've called this shoujo manga, because overall it's a lighter tone. But the characters are all older HS to college age. They talk about sex (some implied offscreen), there's an attempted assault, and some steamy-sweet kisses with Christie and Matt (especially volume 3). So, yes, a clean read, but still some topics in there.
4 stars. A good growing up story with some more realistic romantic story threads. I think I'm not as gushing about it because I just loved Berrybrook so much and had my bar set so high. Still definitely worth the read.