Volume 7, middle school continues in the story of friends Nitorikun, the boy who wants to be a girl, and Takatsuki-san, the girl who wants to be a boy. Skirts the line between teen drama and slice of life, as we see teens face the horrors of. . . acne. And middle school level desire, which barely gets expressed.
Not a whole lot happens in this one, except, notably, Nitori-kun contacts a famous model for advice. And there's lots of crushes and blushing and confusion and pain and laughter. This is character-driven manga, not issue-driven, primarily, with very likable and realistic and fun characters (more girls by far than boys), not blown up with manga silliness, highlighting issues of gender identity in ways we could not have seen twenty years ago. It's just a middle school story you might have read twenty years ago but one that now narrates and brings out in the open gender questioning/exploring that was always there.
Where I live (in one of the five safest glbtq places in the country, OUT magazine says) this seems to be more a thing than ever, to openly explore gender identity from every possible angle, to role play, to explore real feelings, to change names, maybe to cross dress, maybe not, to not take anything for granted. . . with gay and lesbian marriages now in many areas a regular thing that we might never have imagined twenty five years ago. . . at the same time people are getting assaulted in some areas for being gay. Troubling, fascinating times, exciting times, still, and complicated.