Updated April 2024 - on my nth re-read of the first volume that suddenly lead into a weekend spent devouring all six and a half volumes, I am going to double down on my original review and say that this is a five star story full stop, and one of the best yuri series out there. The way this manga grows its characters is top-notch and years of hindsight have only improved my opinion of it.
Original:
This is a four star story with five star characters and I hope I can successfully put into words how good it is. This is the only book in recent memory where I got to the end and immediately went back to the start and read it cover to cover a second time right away.
There are no easy answers to life and even fewer to high school and this book wades into one of the most realistic depictions of the latter I have ever seen in a yuri manga. No all girls school here, just a decisively unisex classroom awash in cliques and tribalism.
And this thing is itself awash in layers and themes, from forgiveness to regret to being a true friend to not judging anybody based on first impressions. Heck, they manage to make a pair of handkerchiefs wonderfully symbolic and that, to me, shows an author caring about what is on that page.
Fujishiro is de facto head of the gyaru faction in her class and possibly the most popular girl in school. She definitely has no time for Kurokawa - the plain, introverted fujoshi who is happily isolated with her own band of otaku pals.
Despite her obsession with being the cutest thing on earth, Fujishiro finds herself dumped very early in the story and Kurokawa overhears the whole thing, leading to an incredibly bittersweet moment where Fujishiro leans hard on Kurokawa, all too aware of how she looked down on her and will probably get what she deserves out of it.
Except Kurokawa isn’t as heartless or vindictive as she could be, though she is certainly very guarded. When Fujishiro misinterprets a harsh judgment as words of encouragement she decides Kurokawa is actually a good person at heart and hits the ground running to make a new friend.
You’d think this was about to become a whole ‘plain girl gets made over’ scenario and while there is some of that, what makes it work is how much both give to each other. It’s much cuter to see them meeting in the middle - you can’t beat the image of a gyaru reading manga.
And much like crossing the streams in Ghostbusters, mixing cliques in high school can have catastrophic results. Fujishiro deliberately cuts ties because she realizes they’re kind of awful (though I do like that the author even adds a little nuance here), but Kurokawa, who was quite happy in her little circle, ends up being ostracized for really no good reason.
There is a great role reversal here and I especially love that Kurokawa doesn’t let Fujishiro off the hook for destroying her school life, even as she’s coming to Kurokawa’s rescue. We also see how bad Kurokawa’s self-esteem is and how much she beats herself up for letting Fujishiro hang earlier on.
Obviously this book has a lot to unpack. These two are so real, so complicated, so imperfect that even if they never got together I would read a whole series of them being friends (and outside of Kurokawa being highly vulnerable to Fujishiro’s face magic there’s basically no romance yet).
And it’s full of wit and charm. There are a lot of fun sequences throughout, such as a personal favourite - the pitch-perfect Shonen Jump manga parody - and the fact that Fujishiro’s catch phrase appears to be ‘Let me repay you with my body!’.
To borrow a line I’ve used before, this is not just a good yuri, it’s not just a good manga, it’s a good book period. I didn’t quite like how the volume ended; I think I understood what they were going for, but it’s the one time the intent isn’t really clear. I could go on and on about this one, but it’s worth the time and the money to experience for yourself.