College student Suekichi has a problem: he's inherited 4.5 million dollars and has a mysterious woman in his bed! in this latest volume, Aya's work as a bar hostess has Suekichi and Munakata worried. But Maybe it's not Aya that they should be worried about! And when Sukichi refuses to go on holiday with Aya, she turns to her ex, and arouses conflicted feelings in Suekichi.
Naoki Yamamoto ( 山本直樹 Yamamoto Naoki) is a male Japanese manga artist. In his early years, he also used a pen name Tou Moriyama (森山 塔?) as well as Mori Touyama (塔山 森?) for his adult-oriented works, but nowadays he no longer uses it.
Naoki Yamamoto's seven-volume story is drawing to a close, but rather than feeling like it's building up to something huge and grandiose, it feels like it's running its natural course, and I don't mean that in a bad way. A lot of stories feel far too dragged out or far too short, whereas Dance Till Tomorrow feels like it's all unfolding naturally. While its characters make some questionable choices, especially in this volume, they feel natural and realistic. The comedy never gets in the way and never stretches the limits of the established reality, and never forces anyone to act uncharacteristically to get a cheap laugh out of the reader. The writing in this story has been all-around pretty stellar, and its compelling characters keep you enthralled as well as entertained. I'm looking forward to finishing this series and seeing how it ends, though I'll probably be sad that it does, eventually, end. Like all great things.