This is just a really relaxing, very readable series, so I can see how it's gone on for so long. I suppose it's like traditional Sunday comic strips - For Better or For Worse ran for something like thirty years, without anyone waiting for a clear "end point." So a regularly published series about a middle-aged gay couple in Japan is actually really nice, and something to be happy about.
My main question is how there will be enough recipes to fill out 20+ volumes, but I'm not a very imaginative or inventive cook, so I'm sure that's not a difficult task for someone who actually enjoys that craft.
There isn't a huge amount to the stories in this volume: a few more instances of Shiro not wanting to be overly visible as a gay man, a cute chapter about Kenji being excited to finally take care of his overly independent boyfriend while he's ill, and a couple storylines about Kenji and Shiro both turning into confidantes for their employers.
Shiro's boss is having difficulties with her daughter-in-law, who's fulfilling the Ideal Housewife role that she had been criticized for diverging from in her youth - choosing instead to set up a successful law firm with her husband. But each generation has its own issues. Her mother thought she didn't take good enough care of her husband and that's why he got ill at a young age; she thinks her daughter-in-law is overfeeding her son.
I liked the quiet focus on different forms of feminism here, as well as with Shiro's friend's daughter later on - a woman who's been living with her boyfriend for eight years but sees no need to get married to have children.
This leads Shiro to ask Kenji how he feels about children. Kenji, unsurprisingly, has always wanted kids but is realistic about that not being possible for a gay man in Japan. Shiro, also unsurprisingly, has never even thought about children. I don't know if this will be a story element later on, or if they've just accepted what their lives are. I could definitely see Kenji spoiling a kid rotten, and Shiro teaching them how to cook.
I also really, really liked the end of this volume, when Shiro and Kenji both think about how much they value each other. (I liked, too, that Shiro complimented Kenji's bland, overly sweet, not very well thought out cooking. He's quiet and brusque but he cares a lot.)
It's very sweet and I'm growing to really appreciate this couple and their lives together.