Combining killer cosmetics and lots of cheeky gay panic, I THINK I TURNED MY CHILDHOOD FRIEND INTO A GIRL v1 is the peculiar intersection of comedic romance and jokey progressivism. Less self-indulgent than it is overly self-aware, the manga's title says it all: a popular high-school guy with a skill for cosmetology and other beauty products takes a shining to his childhood buddy after prettying them up on the fly. Long eyelashes, blushing cheeks, and sloping collarbones are sure to follow. Pouty lips, new hairstyles, and several shopping trips to purchase "nice things" soon thereafter.
Mido is tall, athletic, and popular. His embarrassment over his obsession with cosmetics has fed an earnest effort to hide his skills through makeover sessions with his sisters and purchasing lipstick at the mall while wearing a disguise. He's a good kid who keeps his friends close. The manga doesn't quite convince readers he's less paranoid about his makeup hobby than he is ashamed of it, but one supposes future chapters will entertain this conversation in further detail. Afterall, if only one protagonist struggles with how others view his behaviors as a presumably heteronormative male, then that's surely the least of the author's challenges.
Hiura is Mido's mousy, sardonic, gamer friend. Hiura's waifish appearance is only slightly hidden by long bangs and baggy clothes, but the character's pleasantly round face, large eyes, and dainty expressions make them an ideal makeup model. Hiura's fascination with cosmetics is nowhere near as expansive as that of Mido, but good fashion and good self-care can go a long way toward building a one's self-confidence. As such, when Hiura transitions to identifying as female (or, in the least, presenting as female), the shift is fast, awkward, somewhat confusing, and very much in the realm of "What have I gotten myself into?" The comic's visual style comfortable plays at merging the angular and diffident expressions of boys' love comics with the doe-eyed expressions native to shoujo comics.
I THINK I TURNED MY CHILDHOOD FRIEND INTO A GIRL v1 pivots around the relationship between Mido (he/him) and Hiura (she/her), but does an excellent job of staging a strong secondary cast. Most friends-become-affectionate romantic comedies reinforce their central pairing by isolating their characters. I THINK I TURNED MY CHILDHOOD FRIEND INTO A GIRL v1 does something different: the author structures the book such that it's impossible for the story to function well without engaging well-meaning secondary characters.
For example, readers cannot obtain a genuine sense of what Hiura's MtF transition is like without overhearing conversations from concerned female classmates and other, over-protective chatty types. Or, readers might not have a genuine sense of the relational drift between the two childhood friends without the added perspectives of Mido's three older sisters. (Interestingly, Hiura lives with her grandmother, which may or may not portend future family conversations about her transition.) This is a positive-leaning manga that generally eschews bad vibes, but even so, the book's support structure lends the story a strain of authenticity and kindness.
This is a fun manga with a simple premise. Hopefully, the author will endeavor to keep Hiura's personality the same (dry, derisive), despite the overly enhanced cuteness. Insofar as the English-language publication is concerned, one's curiosity can't help but wonder what direction the original (Japanese) editorial team took on pronouns (or whether the pronouns will factor into the story at all). Again, I THINK I TURNED MY CHILDHOOD FRIEND INTO A GIRL v1, is a simple and fun comic. The weight it gives a difficult and complex topic will surely shift according to the needs of its equally awkward and complex characters.