Your & My Secret, Volume 1

April 1, 2009 · by Melinda Beasi · 13 Comments

Here is today’s quick review!

Your & My Secret, Vol. 1
By Ai Morinaga
Published by Tokyopop

ymsecret
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Akira Uehara is a sweet, shy boy with a crush on his brash, beautiful schoolmate, Nanako Momoi. When Nanako calls in sick from school one day, Akira volunteers to deliver her homework to her house and finds himself ensnared in a scientific experiment created by Nanako’s crackpot grandfather, which ultimately leaves Akira and Nanako trapped in each other’s bodies. Unfortunately, the grandfather’s machine is ruined, and it will take him unknown volumes of time and money to repair it, leaving the two no hope of being returned to their original bodies anytime soon. Akira is appalled with the situation, but it doesn’t take Nanako long to realize she enjoys life in a boy’s body and has little desire to reverse the experiment. Even Akira is struck by how much more readily his personality is accepted in the body of a girl, though he can’t help but be disturbed by the sudden romantic advances from his best friend, Senbongi.

This story could so easily be either stupidly fluffy or completely offensive, but it instead offers a fun, insightful look into traditional gender roles, teenage sexuality, and the precarious line between friendship and love. Both Akira and Nanako find that people respond to their personalities more positively in bodies of the opposite sex. Akira’s quiet sweetness and accommodating impulses, previously labeled as weak, are perceived as desirable, ladylike qualities when people think he’s a girl. Likewise, Nanako’s aggressive manner and bluntness are considered “manly” in Akira’s body, winning over even Akira’s parents who were apparently worried he might never become a man. The scene where Akira discovers this is honestly heartbreaking, even through the humor of it, and though it is fun to watch Nanako (who is obviously relieved by the sudden opportunity to be herself), Akira’s feelings add another level to the story that I very much hope to see further explored in the subsequent volumes.

Similarly, while it is wonderfully funny (funny because it’s true!) that the first things these characters think about doing in their new bodies is checking out their sexual organs (Nanako, of course, accomplishes this within the first few minutes), it also brings up the question of the potential consequences involved, particularly when Akira discovers that Nanako has robbed him of his own “first time.” Both characters find themselves romantically entangled with their (same-sex) best friends now that they are in bodies of the opposite gender, and that opens up a whole world of questions for each of them, though they both react very differently to the situation. Nanako barely stops to think at all as she barrels forward with her feelings in the moment, while Akira spends so much of his time feeling hurt that his best friend would go after the girl (or at least the body of the girl) who he openly crushed on that he pretty much ignores every other feeling aside from a few fleeting thoughts over what a good kisser Senbongi is.

Everything in the story has both the potential to be hilariously funny and shockingly deep all at once, and though the focus on humor keeps things enjoyably light, everything else is just there under the surface, promising rich things to come. Having rescued the series from ADV, Tokyopop has release four volumes of Your & My Secret so far, with the fifth scheduled for release in May. With so much promise in just the first volume, this is definitely a series I’ll be hurrying to catch up on!

Comments

  1. jansong@livejournal says:

    If this is a short review, how many words do you need before it is a long one? :)

    • Oh… I don’t know. Heh. Well, technically this falls into my criteria for a “full length” review, but it’s shorter than most of the ones I put in that category by at least 200 words. Maybe I shouldn’t have used the word “short” though. :)

  2. Grace says:

    This is one on my list to read for sure. My experiences with “genderbending” manga are pretty much on par with fanfic’s “genderswap”. I always read hoping there will be something good, and there rarely is, but this sounds like it could be one of the few gems.

    (Right now I’m reading Never Give Up!, which is definitely not. Though I am only on vol 6 of 13, so who knows, maybe it will turn around, or at least end on a slightly better note than it started out on.)

  3. I read this back when it was an ADV release and hung onto that single volume all this time waiting for it to be continued somehow. Of course, now that I own volumes 2-4 I have stacked them in my to-read pile(s) and occasionally look at them admiringly, but that’s about the extent of it. :)

Trackbacks

  1. [...] Comic Book Bin) Danielle Leigh on vol. 1 of Train*Train (Comics Should Be Good) Melinda Beasi on vol. 1 of Your and My Secret (there it is, plain as [...]

  2. [...] for that to matter. The main characters are in some ways reminiscent of Ai Morinaga’s Your & My Secret in that they are written as extreme stereotypes of the opposite gender, yet both of them are more [...]

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