Life’s a beach, or it is this time around anyway. Once their anniversary is out of the way, the company retreat brings Asako and Kotaro together under the gaze of their coworkers. And as things move forward, the old parental urge is starting to bubble up.
Ah, reading a volume of this book is just the nicest feeling and we dial back on the drama for some good old fun, both sexy and not as much. It intermingles with some excellent growth and makes for a (mostly) great read. It can’t be overemphasized how consistently good this manga has been.
Asako is the star here, unquestionably, as she really shows how far she’s come with her confidence and the ways in which she has benefited from Kotaro’s support. She shoots down somebody hitting on her by herself this time out and it’s a real moment for her.
First she has to make it through a mountain she makes out of a molehill, of course, but naturally it is a way smaller deal to Kotaro and leads to a very cute and natural moment later - these two are perfectly believable as a couple and it’s part of this series’ strength.
And the sex comes back! Repeatedly! After a couple dryer volumes we get a reminder of how thirsty our leads are for each other. I have always appreciated the way Sweat & Soap mixes acceptance, light fetishism, and mutual respect into its steamier bits and that hasn’t changed here.
Before the beach, however, which brings back a ton of fun side characters (and also proves my guiding manga maxim that every mangaka can devise a way to put a book’s cast in swimsuits at any time in any genre if they choose), we have to deal with an ‘oh no I have gained weight’ storyline.
I have complicated feelings about this as somebody who thinks people need to be happy in their bodies and is also a long-distance runner, but also doesn’t like undue pressure people put on themselves to conform to an ideal.
Still, I think the story handles it very well - Asako does her research, doesn’t just cut food out, lets Kotaro know what she’s doing so she doesn’t drive him nuts, and enlists his support, which he is all too willing to give. The running section in particular gives another look at how Asako has changed and it’s a real earned moment.
Honestly I am way more critical of the last sections where they start lightly daydreaming about what a family might look like. I have a lot of complicated thoughts on this, but let me just say that I don’t love going in on the ‘having kids is the traditional endpoint for a relationship’. This is definitely neither the first nor last book to do this, but it certainly rankled me a bit because everything else it does is so, so well done.
4.5 stars - not quite as intense as previous volumes and for as much as I love how strong Asako is getting, there are a couple of parts here that don’t fully work for me. Adjust rating based on your own tastes, but, yes, these two are still the best manga couple ever.