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Manga Bookshelf

Discussion, Resources, Roundtables, & Reviews

February 2, 2024 by Katherine Dacey and Sean Gaffney Leave a Comment

Bookshelf Briefs 2/2/24

Bakemonogatari, Vol. 20 | By NISIOISIN and Oh!Great | Kodansha Manga – This continues to take all the remaining arcs that Oh!Great wasn’t going to have time to get to and throwing them ALL into Tsubasa Cat. So we get the bulk of Shinobu Mail here, And we also get a great deal of Tsubasa Tiger. The mangaka and writer are clearly working quite closely on this, and NISIOISIN is taking the opportunity to clean up and improve some stuff. The scene between Senjougahara and Hanekawa in Tsubasa Tiger the book is great, but here it’s great and makes much more sense. (And also gives us the shower scene as much as it can—NISIOISIN and Oh!Great both love their fanservice.) The manga version may be ending in two books’ time, but it’s going out with a bang. Highly recommended for fans of the franchise. – Sean Gaffney

Doomsday Cleaning | By zaki | Star Fruit Books – This charming short story may remind you a little—OK, a lot—of Wall-E, as its main protagonist is a robot tasked with cleaning up trash on a seemingly uninhabited planet. When the robot crosses paths with an animated pig, however, the robot gets swept up in an unexpected quest to retrieve a piece of junk that holds special meaning for its new porcine companion. Their journey to the bottom of an enormous trash pit is both suspenseful and surprisingly touching, while a third-act twist adds a dash of humor that pushes the story in a new, delightful direction that invites the reader to view the robot’s mission in a new light. Crisp artwork is the icing on the cupcake. – Katherine Dacey

I Married My Female Friend, Vol. 1 | By Shio Usui | Seven Seas – I was surprised how much I enjoyed this, given what I was expecting. The basic plot is that two best friends promise, if they’re still single in five years, they’ll marry each other. Well, it’s five years later, and gay marriage is now legal, so they’re now married, and one of them is writing about the experience for a column. Of course, the twist is that one of the two actually IS romantically attracted… or at least, I certainly seem to think so. What makes this so much fun is that the other half of the partnership is not framed as clueless or thick for missing this, it really is hard to pick up. Still, they grow closer anyway, and things come to a head with a hospital visit. This is from the Doughnuts Under a Crescent Moon artist, and is just as good. I really like Kurumi especially. – Sean Gaffney

Kaguya-sama: Love Is War, Vol. 27 | By Aka Akasaka | Viz Media – We start the epilogue to this series with this volume. The main crisis is “resolved,” but that doesn’t mean everything’s hunky-dory. For one thing, Shirogane is off to Stanford, and Kaguya oversleeps and misses telling him goodbye, which leads to one of the funniest gags in the entire series. Elsewhere, Shirogane is also told what kind of man he’ll have to become in order to protect someone like Kaguya—he’s got to get much better with money, for one—and Kaguya decides what she wants to do for her career, but runs into a slight problem in trying to put it into motion, a problem not helped by Ishigami’s presence. All this plus the final (?) chapter in the Chika Fujiwara, Ramen Master side story. This is still great fun. – Sean Gaffney

Pass the Monster Meat, Milady!, Vol. 1 | By Kanata Hoshi and Chika Mizube | Kodansha Manga – Based on an as-yet-unlicensed light novel, this is another villainess story—but instead of an “Akuyaku Reijou,” we get an “Akujiki Reijou,” because our heroine absolutely terrifies people. Melfiera has been told, after several years of failure, to get a husband or she’ll be sent to a convent. The trouble is… she loves to eat the meat from monsters, which, while normally poisonous, is tasty when properly prepared. Shunned by most, she then runs into her soulmate, Duke Galbraith, the “Mad Duke,” who glories in killing monsters. He falls for her immediately, she falls almost as hard. And they’re honestly made for each other. This is fun, with two eccentric people complementing each other’s foibles. – Sean Gaffney

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