Hina moves forward, and Taiki is caught up in it. Chinatsu stays the same, and Taiki is caught up in it. And, then, Chinatsu moves out, and, yes, Taiki is caught up in it. There’s a lot of that going around this volume.
Hina rules. She absolutely rules. These reviews have largely become the ‘let’s reiterate how great a character Hina is’ show, but I cannot over-emphasize how much she brings to an already good series.
We come back from her dancing around the issue last volume to her flat-out confessing to Taiki, bold as brass… which tracks, honestly. And she knows that he’s pining for Chinatsu, but Hina’s not going to let him forget she exists (or her feelings, which provides some very fun moments throughout) even as she cheers him on with her own rival.
I wouldn’t say it’s mature, but the phrase ‘I want to see the person I like doing well’ is peppered through this volume and that can apply to more than one scenario. It’s a real interesting take on a romance.
And the story calls Chinatsu out with one of those ‘terribly relevant to the plot’ TV shows that tends to air during fictional narratives and she is clearly not an idiot about anybody’s feelings, but she’s also not as forthcoming as Hina.
Which, honestly, is fine. Chinatsu is her own person and I like the obvious difference between her and Hina, even if she might be getting slightly upstaged by the latter at every turn. It’s just her nature and I like that she acknowledges that it’s not her to be as forward.
I wouldn’t even say a lot happens in this volume, minus Chinatsu moving out for a very good reason that actually does something with the forced cohabitation trope that I grumbled about in volume one. That’s some sharp maneuvering if I do say so.
And if not a lot happens, well, like another manga I just read, it doesn’t happen in a very interesting fashion. This feels like a real coming-of-age story that’s written so well that I just like following it even as it’s doing the school festival bit.
I mean, the way Taiki turns out to be an incredibly reliable helper for his class is a great turn. There’s definitely a fair amount of silliness to the story, but it lands on a more believable side than even a lot of shojo manage to do.
Yeah, it does the ‘we’re stranded together’ thing between two people, but it’s still grounded. Part of it is also that the art doesn’t go crazy with the chibis or wild takes. It grounds things in a way that makes the story stand out a bit more.
It could also just be the lack of fourth wall breaks or comedy that isn’t rooted in the characters, but this really works because of said characters. I think my only complaint is Taiki’s guy friend having his own unrequited crush on Hina, which feels a little too predictable.
Still, whatever, I love this story. It’s one of the few manga that just makes me want to start the series over from the beginning again and just enjoy it straight through once more.
5 stars - yeah, it’s on the list of ‘start at 5 stars and work backwards’ manga for me and that’s some rarefied company these days. It has a touch more realism that I wouldn’t want in all my manga, but in this case works absolutely perfectly for the story.