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Danielle Leigh's Reading Diary -- Shojo Round Up Post

Today I take brief looks at recent or upcoming shojo manga releases -- Goong volume 5, Love Com volume 12 and NANA volume 17.  (I discuss plot points of each book freely, so beware if you don't want to know "what happens").


Goong
volume 5 by Park SoHee -- Our tentative married couple is separated in this volume, causing a great deal of emotional harm to Chae-Kung, who becomes absurdly weak as a result.  On the one hand, she's really just a normal girl who has been placed into a demanding and unforgiving world without any real support.  On the other hand, I feel like she needs servants to carry around her own fainting couch, just in case.  Not my kind of shojo protagonist to be honest.

In spite of the enforced distance between her and her husband, she's falling more and more in love with Shin, while at the same time she's gone beyond a person of interest and reached the level of object of desire for her husband's cousin, Yul, the prince who was originally supposed to inherit the Korean throne.  While Yul's mother schemes in the background to disgrace Shin and return her son the "rightful" order of succession, I find that I'm totally and completely hooked by the title's highly charged emotional developments.  In the end, all the melodrama surrounding young, and comparatively innocent, royals, reveals that in spite of Shin's chilly personality, both members of the couple are struggling to survive the pit of vipers that constitute court life.  This volume doesn't disappoint on that level even if I sometimes want to shake each member of the cast at varying points.

Review Copy Provided By Yen Press.

Love Com volume 12 by Aya Nakahara -- In this volume, we see the gang starting to face the scary blank page that is their future, i.e. life after graduation.  This volume has particular resonance for me, considering the current economic situation in the U.S., paired with the uncertainties that accompany graduate student life.  I really felt for Risa in this volume -- while Otani is planning to go to college, she is trying to figure out what actually inspires her and if she can really build a life from those interests.  Amusingly, while Risa is mulling over a possible future as a stylist, she is randomly pulled into the fashion world as a fill-in model in one of those only-in-shojo coincidences.  Even though this is a cliched occurrence, Nakahara infuses everything with such good humor and warmth, I found myself enjoying Risa's few hours as an instant-Cinderella.

Meanwhile, while everyone's worried about Otani passing his entrance exams, unexpected disaster hits elsewhere in their circle of friends.  That shifts the story's focus from the heart of the book to side characters, who lack the high-energy back-and-forth dynamic of Risa and Otani's relationship.  On the other hand, Risa and Otani now appear stable in comparison to a couple who can't withstand the pressure of planning for post-graduate life.  That is a welcome development,  considering how long it took for Otani to get on board and really embrace his new role has Otani's boyfriend.  I look forward to seeing the series return its spotlight to the our favorite mismatched duo and resolove the question how they deal with the question of diverging futures.

Review Copy provided by Viz Media.

NANA volume 17 by Ai Yazawa -- Nana and Hachi are finally -- finally! -- reunited thanks to the scum-sucking tabloids playing havoc with Nana's personal life.  Hachi, devoted friend that she is, rushes straight from her holiday with her parents to comfort the surprisingly serene Nana.  The last few volumes, while always good, were also all kinds of heart-breaking, thanks to the emotional distance between the two friends and emotional core of the title.  Yazawa's so talented that, of course, we care about what happens to characters outside the two Nanas, but when things aren't right between those two, things aren't right all over.

This volume almost feels like a bit of reprieve, although thanks to Hachi's ominous opening and closing internal monologues (perhaps even dialogues since we know she is always addressing Nana in her heart) we always know we're counting down to some unknown tragedy.  As painful as that knowledge may be, flash forwards to the future also hint that an eventual reunion will occur and perhaps some peace may be found.

A few things of note in this volume:

-Hachi confronts Nana's mother.  It doesn't go well.

-Ren continues to piss me off by showing more consideration for his band's princess than his own wife.  (I can get so angry at these characters which just shows they are practically like real people to me.  Once again, Yazawa is very, very good at what she does).

-Nobu and Hachi meet and it isn't an entirely terrible thing.  Thank god.

-Hachi wears a kimono and is adorable (no surprise there, I just like to make note of it).

-We learn Takumi really *is* quite weak to Reira, which is probably why he maintains constant distance between them.  I don't think he can handle becoming more than he already is to her, or have her grow in significance in his heart.  Poor bastard.

Review Copy provided by Viz Media.

  • Posted on June 24, 2009 @ 03:59 PM

12 Comments

Hachi wears a kimono and is adorable (no surprise there, I just like to make note of it).

I love that you take the time to mention this. :D

(yes, my comment really *is* this useless)

Danielle Leigh

June 24, 2009 at 7:33 pm

Hachi's my favorite character so to me this comment is happy-making, not useless! :-)

I always feel out of place because most people love Nana (& Ren!) to death. I can leave Ren (and not even "take or leave", just leave, heh), and I do love Nana but I love her with Hachi most of all.

Oh, I am not alone! :D I thought I was the only person who loved Hachi so. I identify with her to such a huge extent, I feel hurt by all the Hachi hate I see floating around LJ.

And yes, I love Nana and Hachi together. Okay, I also love Hachi and Nobu, but Nana and Hachi... *heart*

Danielle Leigh

June 24, 2009 at 7:58 pm

I don't see a lot of Hachi hate (mainly Reira hate, which I can't help but get even if I frown upon it) although I do think Hachi is devalued in fandom because Nana is so "cool." Sometimes I think Hachi's our way into the story (normal girl caught up in crazy celebrity rivalry etc.) but unlike you I don't identify with her much emotionally, I kind of just love her. (My crazy pride probably makes me more like Nana, oddly).

I have a career drive that is probably more like Nana's than Hachi's, but otherwise I identify with Hachi probably more than any other manga character I've seen. Which is not to say I'm just like her (I've never been girly, or flighty in the same way she is), but her core emotional conflicts and her core strengths and weaknesses are very close to my own. I was surprised at the hate when I found it, mainly at the big NANA LJ comm, black_stones. People there seem to take it for granted that everyone hates (or at best, tolerates) Hachi. It made me sad.

I can understand Reira hate too, though like you, I frown upon it. She is the hardest woman for me to like in the series (and probably one of my least favorite characters overall), but I don't hate her by any means. I save my hatred for Takumi. ;) I do think Trapnest is a seriously screwed-up bunch, though. Blast has issues, but they love each other madly. Trapnest's love is seriously twisted.

Danielle Leigh

June 25, 2009 at 4:21 am

I find it Hi-larious that I can infer from your statement that while you may "hate" Takumi more than Reira, you also might "like" him more than Reira (I'm probably reading into that but I actually feel that way about him...he infuriates me but I actually like him a lot more than Reira). I'm not even sure if that makes sense yet emotionally it feels quite true! ;-)

[...] Danielle Leigh rounds up a healthy handful of shoujo volumes at Comics Should Be Good. Kate Dacey serves up some short takes as well: vol. 9 of Kurosagi Corpse [...]

Haha, you know I wouldn't have realized that myself if you hadn't said it. :D I think you're probably right. I think my deep hatred for Takumi is based quite a bit on the fact that, like Hachi, I know I would have fallen for him (at least initially--I'd like to think I'd have thrown him over for Nobu by now) and I really, really hate that. :) Every time he cheats on her, I seriously want to stab him in the heart. I think you're right, though. I think I do like him more than Reira, or at least I have more patience with him, and maybe even more sympathy on some level. I think what's difficult with Reira, is that her beauty (looks and voice) causes people to coddle her in a way that is really unhealthy for her.

Danielle Leigh

June 25, 2009 at 6:29 am

I'm pretty much on the same page with you -- I feel more comfortable with Takumi as a character because everyone recognizes the ways in which he is a deeply flawed person, including HIM. With Reira, she makes weak attempts to voice her flaws, but everyone just tells her how wonderful she is anyway (save Shin, who is honest enough to tell how how selfish she is, and he's really no more than a child!). Her behavior with Ren is atrocious and selfish (Ren's to blame as well, of course) and well. Then there is the Takumi issue.... *whistles because some of this has yet to come out in U.S. releases*

[...] Danielle Leigh rounds up a healthy handful of shoujo volumes at Comics Should Be Good. Kate Dacey serves up some short takes as well: vol. 9 of Kurosagi Corpse [...]

[...] The ever-fabulous Danielle Leigh posted a shojo round-up a day or two ago, and we ended up rambling on together in comments about NANA. Look for more of [...]

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