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Cargando... I Married My Best Friend to Shut My Parents Up (2018)por Naoko Kodama
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. "I Married My Best Friend to Shut My Parents Up" was endearing, and did make me laugh. I enjoyed my time, but the pacing felt incredibly rushed. I'm assuming this is meant as a one-shot, so I understand that such a compromise would be needed, but I'm positive that a better book could've been made in the space provided. Maybe it could've been more lenient with how much their romance progressed, I dunno, but I can't help but coming out thinking, "... Well that was sudden." 2.5 stars rounded up. It was a bit too short for the story told. Shame. But I loved the art and the humour. ***Random thought*** I do notice a trend in my enjoyment of manga; the older I get the pickier I get. I can see what I would enjoy as a young'un. But the old fart I am becoming I need a bit more meat in my stories. This review is a grammatical tragedy. Time for some sleep... "I Now Pronounced You Chuck & Larry" gets gender-swapped? But here the same-sex marriage of convenience -- one wants her parents to stop arranging dates for her and the other needs a place to crash -- becomes something more for two these two former high school classmates. The story was almost cute but not strong enough to overcome some problems with consent and homophobia. And the back-up story was a bit of nothing told in an unnecessarily vague manner. I’m not particularly familiar with Manga style comics, and this seemed a good entry point - queer content, and one of my favourite tropes, being fake married friends-to-lovers. Sadly, I found the style off-putting. I spent a lot of time trying to work out what was going on, because while in theory each chapter was a linear narrative, it seemed to jump all over the place. I have no idea how much of that might be details lost in translation, how much is me not having the sophistication in reading of the manga style, and how much is attributable to this specific work. I’m glad to have read it, because I like seeing what is happening with queer fiction across multiple areas. I’ll be interested to see if it is more enjoyable on a second eating, which I anticipate doing at some point in the future. Probably after I’ve read more manga, and have a better feel for the conventions of the form. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
A brand-newyuri manga about falling in love AFTER marriage! Morimoto, a young professional woman in Japan, wishes her parents would stop trying to get her to marry a man and settle down. In an unexpected move, her friend from high school offers to be her wife in a sham marriage, to make Morimoto's parents back off. But this "fake" marriage could unearth something very real! No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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With that said, I appreciated that Hana does not struggle with her feelings or identity, as so many same-sex relationships in manga are about both parties working out who they are and how they feel until they both come to the same conclusion. Additionally, the subplots that are blink-and-you'll-miss-it but really interesting include homophobic, high-pressure parents (and the one panel that reveals the relationship between parents left me really sad that the depth of what's going on in this story is just out of reach of the actual focus of the narrative); sexism in the workplace; and well-meaning coworkers who want what Machi doesn't realize is right in front of her.
There are three very short stories at the end of the book that are, oddly, far more detailed and in-depth: one about alternate teen versions of Machi and Hana as promising sports stars at an elite athletic school; another that is simply a missing scene from the main story; and, finally, a short autobiographical word from the author.
I always love a good one-shot, and this one is fun and sweet, but I feel like it either needed to be much more focused on the way the relationship builds to its conclusion, or it needed a second volume to give the plot and subplots more space to breathe. ( )