Chihayafuru, Vol. 24 | By Yuki Suetsugu | Kodansha Comics (digital only) – Hooray, I’m finally caught up again on Chihayafuru! This volume finds Chihaya and friends lending their support to Harada-sensei as he vies for the Master’s spot. It’s satisfying seeing Harada-sensei begin to make use of the intel Chihaya provided about the current Master’s weakness, but absolutely the best part of this volume is spending more time with reigning Queen Shinobu, learning how lonely she is, and seeing once again how much she really needs someone like Chihaya in her life. I deeply hope that after this we’re able to see the two of them communicating more and supporting each other. I also really appreciate that despite being this intimidatingly good rival, Shinobu is also written with such warmth and sympathy. I want to see her happy. – Michelle Smith
Kaguya-sama: Love Is War, Vol. 18 | By Aka Akasaka | Viz Media – The front half of this volume is filled with silliness and setting up future plotlines down the road, mostly in terms of Ishigami finally asking Tsubame on a date, but this volume is dwarfed by its back half, as we get one of the most serious chapters yet showing us Hayasaka’s day… which involves reporting on everything Kaguya does to her family… and her telling Kaguya that she’s quitting. Needless to say, Kaguya takes this as maturely and responsibly as you might guess, and the two of them head off to the class trip basically looking like a couple who just broke up. This is clearly going to spill over into the next book, and I expect it will be more serious. That said, there’s still tons of laughs here. – Sean Gaffney
Komi Can’t Communicate, Vol. 11 | By Tomohito Oda | Viz Media – Manbagi takes a backseat here, and you get the sense that the author is mostly thinking of adding her to the cast herd—and boy, there sure are a lot of characters now, aren’t there? The best parts of this volume are developing the burgeoning… whatever between Komi and Tadano, who clearly are over the moon for each other but too reticent to do anything about it. Here we have a trip where their families run into each other, and a stargazing trip that heavy rain turns into snuggling up in a cabin to keep warm. The author of this series knows that its readers eat this like catnip, but is also aware that they can’t go to that well every single time. That’s why the cast keeps expanding all the time. – Sean Gaffney
Manly Appetites: Minegishi Loves Otsu, Vol. 1 | By Mito | Seven Seas – If there’s one combination of genres that I can’t seem to resist, it’s that of BL and food manga. And so I very happily picked up the debut of Manly Appetites and was delighted by its sweet silliness. While food is a legitimately important part of the manga’s story, so far the series doesn’t focus much on the food itself—there are no recipes given and hardly anything that could count as a cooking sequence is shown. Instead, the manga revolves around a single gag: Minegishi loves giving his office coworker Otsu food to eat, seemingly oblivious to the fact that he might be crushing on Otsu, too. Granted, Otsu doesn’t seem to be picking up on it either, much to the dismay of another colleague and friend. Manly Appetites is a cute and fluffy manga with lots of blushing, ridiculous humor, and charm; I’m looking forward to reading more. – Ash Brown
Takane & Hana, Vol. 16 | By Yuki Shiwasu | Viz Media – There is still a very big issue with the age difference between Takane and Hana and the fact that she’s still in school, and as the series comes towards its conclusion, we know that eventually we’re going to have to see the consequences of it. That doesn’t happen here, but we come close, as Hiromi, struggling to understand a father who’s nothing like his idol, and having their secret exposed to that same father, promptly runs away from home. If nothing else, what follows shows how well Hana is maturing, handling the Hiromi situation like a pro (cell phone batteries aside), and also handling Takane quite handily too. They’ve both become experts on each other. That said, pretty sure everything goes public and falls apart next volume. – Sean Gaffney
UQ Holder, Vol. 21 | By Ken Akamatsu | Kodansha Comics – Fights, fights, and more fights. Punching the clothes off the women in the cast multiple times because that’s how we roll with Akamatsu. That said, the Love Hina days seem long ago as he really is here for the battles and not much else. We get some backstory for two more of the UQ Holder team, which is good to see but unfortunately all I keep thinking of is how much one of them looks like Nagi from Negima, which reminds us how bad the author is at drawing different people. There are some surprising villains here, as the mind-controlled puppet side brings over a few very powerful guests. Fortunately, Yukihime shows up at the end to kick ass. I suspect that will take up most of volume 22. For Akamatsu fans only. – Sean Gaffney
We’re New at This, Vol. 2 | By Ren Kawahara | Kodansha Comics (digital only) – Thankfully, while it still comes up once or twice, the second volume of this romantic comedy does not continue to be “will they ever have sex,” but instead focuses on the quirks and faults of the main couple, who are both adorable—and also very into each other. Honestly, I could watch Sumika doing anything and be entertained—her character type is right up my street. Ikuma is harder, but the author makes a bit more effort here, with an amusing chapter on trying to hide a binge of camping equipment expenditure from his non-outdoorsy wife, or seeing her in her native school nurse environment. (She does not like students clustering around him.) This is cute, funny, and still sometimes sexy. – Sean Gaffney