Nodame Cantabile, Volume 16

nodame16Today I review volume sixteen of Nodame Cantabile for Manga Recon’s Manga Minis column. It is, you’ll notice, a very positive review. I must confess that I have a deep and abiding love for this series and I would be quite surprised if it ever let me down in any significant way. Even my early misgivings about lecherous conductor Stresemann and stereotypically presented Masumi have long been quelled. I could write many paragraphs describing the various charms of each character (just in this volume alone), my general adoration of Nodame, and my long-standing crush on Chiaki–and perhaps someday I will. Today you are spared this long-winded treatise.

Admittedly, much of my love for this series has to do with my own experience as a music (performance) major in college and how nostalgic I become whenever I sit down to read it. I said recently that I thought I was most like Mine–determined to rebel against my strict classical surroundings, but swept up with love for the music in spite of myself. Now that I’m entering a period of my life where I’ve begun singing classically again, I suppose the nostalgia is even closer to my heart.

Whatever the reason, Nodame Cantabile touches me in a very personal way, with its humor, its drama, its cast of wonderfully idiosyncratic characters, and its unusually insightful look into the lives of young performers as they struggle to find balance between insecurity, ambition, and simple love of their art. Though this kind of struggle is not limited to music students (and, in fact, probably describes any person attempting to make a career out of their true vocation), the raw vulnerability required of performers simply to do their work provides the ideal vehicle for expressing these feelings on paper. It is this, I believe, that is Nodame Cantabile‘s great success. Read my review here.

One comment thread

  1. Oliver
    #1

    Hey, I’m glad you love Nodame! You’re right about Streseman because I disliked him the most, too. Say, do you have a lot of sway in the manga community? Maybe you could convince Del Rey to bring out the next volumes quicker than 6 months at a time?

    Reply

Leave a Reply





XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>


Off the Shelf

 Thumbnail
Off the Shelf: ParaChara!

It's all ParaKiss all the time in this week's Off the Shelf! - Welcome to another edition of Off the Shelf with Melinda & Michelle! As always, I'm joined... 

July 28, 2010 | Continue »

MANGA REVIEWS

 Thumbnail
Antique Bakery, Vols. 1-4

As I begin this article, I find myself struck by the impossibility of saying anything about Antique Bakery that hasn't already been said. Undoubtedly... 

July 24, 2010 | Continue »

 Thumbnail
Ooku, Vols. 1-3

In this alternate history of Edo-period Japan, an incurable disease has wiped out much of the nation's male population, leaving women to take up traditional... 

July 22, 2010 | Continue »

 Thumbnail
Garden Dreams

Garden Dreams tells the story of Farhad, a young boy orphaned by the Crusades, who is rescued from the desert by Saud, one of his own people who has lost... 

July 20, 2010 | Continue »

MANHWA REVIEWS

 Thumbnail
Magical JxR, Vol. 1

Jay and Aru are young wizards, ready to graduate from wizarding school. To fulfill their final graduation test, they must make a contract to help a human... 

July 4, 2010 | Continue »

BL BOOKRACK

 Thumbnail
BL Bookrack: Yoshinaga Special

Welcome to the first edition of BL Bookrack, a new, monthly feature co-written with Soliloquy in Blue's Michelle Smith. Once a month, in place of our weekly... 

July 21, 2010 | Continue »



Archives

read manga online

Recent Comments

Affiliates & Sponsors