In the wake of Ryosuke letting her down, Saku finds herself more interested in his brother, Haruki. As she navigates these new emotions, that other relationship is about to hit stormy waters and some people might be going a bit overboard.
This is a rarity for an Io Sakisaka manga - I find the secondary female character way more interesting than the primary. Oh, don’t get me wrong, Saku’s really great and she’s got some actual agency that’s very welcome. Heck, her story is quite good, but, oh, that second plotline…
Poor Kotono clearly has a worthless lump for a boyfriend, that was dead obvious in the first volume, but I was surprised at how fast that started to boil over. There’s a momentum here that’s probably fleeting, looking at you, Ao Haru Ride, but no less welcome in the moment.
Not only does Kotono end up having to defend her choices, she is “rewarded” for them by being utterly let down. Now, the way this happens is a little too coincidental, but you can’t say it doesn’t get the job done. Even if it sure looks to me like a rival is being snuck in at the same time.
And Mitoshi makes for a believably useless try-hard, desperate to impress Kotono to the point of defending honour she never asked to be defended. He also has very little notion of letting things settle before trying to interject himself - he has a crush and he’s just so bad at handling it that it makes him interesting.
So those two are great. I’d pivot to reading about them if I had the chance, honestly, but Saku processes her emotions somewhat rapidly and realizes that she’s more than a little taken with Haruki, if this is, indeed, love. Again, this will probably take a bit, but in the moment that’s a heck of a realization.
Saku remains a lot of fun - she and Haruki have a strong chemistry that isn’t quite there yet, but I love how it’s developing. It definitely feels like Haruki has existed in a long shadow for some time and is more exasperated that people only see him as nice than anything else, even if he can’t change his innate nature.
The whole volume is peppered with lots of fun moments between the two of them (and Saku embarrassing herself, at least in her own mind), plus the drama is certainly more direct than some shojo, yet not as… intense… as some of Sakisaka’s other works. It makes for a solid read and I enjoyed it quite a bit.
So you get big drama and lots of romantic sprinkles. It’s pretty much par for the course for Io Sakisaka, but a reminder that she is consistently strong and literally every single thing of hers I’ve read has been at least good and totally worth my time. And yours, if you enjoy what will likely turn to a slow-burn romance soon enough.
4 stars - it’s hovering between 3.5 and 4, there are some contrivances here, but it’s really good. It’s definitely off to a better start than Love Me, Love Me Not, I certainly prefer these characters, and that also ended up being a really satisfying story from this mangaka. Recommended.