Often it is a little frustrating to read comics series a volume at a time over a number of years, especially if the work is action-based. But I have been reading this series for many years and am perfectly comfortable with reading at its slower, adult pace. It's a meticulously drawn and historically researched story of the nineteenth-century Silk Road, with a focus on girls who are sometimes (and usually happily) betrothed at an early age (some boys are also betrothed in these arranged marriages, too). Increasingly, the focus is on the diversity of cultures at that time and place. In a brief afterword manga, Kaoru Mori tells us that in her drive for accuracy of detail and historical resonance that she hs now traveled to five countries in this region, which she really loves.
Smith, the American anthropologist, now also betrothed to a woman in the region, seems just about ready to go home. He's been photographing and writing cultural linguistics (which makes him close to Mori, an outsider interested in language and culture). Some gender stereotypes are lightly challenged here about who really gets to make societal choices, but the story shows us, again and again, that it is women, working together, that get to make a lot of choices for themselves and to support each other. One site is the baths where the women and girls talk together, share knowledge, develop friendships, and gain some sense of solidarity.
in the way of cultural anthropology, we see in various chapters what these folks do in their spare time (yes, they can be b00000red just as anyone else) (and: Cute cats!!); we see differences in class and nationality between the girls along the Silk Road. Lovely, often sweet stories; a fun and interesting learning experience, with beautiful drawing.