That Blue Sky Feeling Volume 1 Review
This isn't the first time Dai Noshiro has had to transfer schools and he's familiar with the process: be as friendly as he can and he'll quickly be accepted by your...
Love at Fourteen Volume 9 Review
Perhaps the
best part of Love at Fourteen volume 8 was seeing Aoi slowly developing
feelings for the nurse. The two are very much alike, and the nurse hopes Aoi
won't follow in her...
Love at Fourteen Volume 8 Review
Love at Fourteen has been mostly about Kanata and Kazuki, but the series has featured other characters and their relationships. Most of those involve an adult, a bizarre and sometimes disturbing...
Snow White with the Red Hair Volume 1 Review
There are two options when the idiot prince in your area demands you become their concubine: accept with glee (or with anger) or run away. For Shirayuki, the choice was obvious...
Blissful Land Volumes 1 and 2 Review
Khang Zhipa lives deep in the mountains of 18th century Tibet where he spends his days working as a doctor's apprentice and being easily distracted by medicinal herbs. His life has...
Sacrificial Princess and the King of Beasts Volume 7 Review
One of the best parts of this series is seeing what animals are turned into beastfolk. It's the sort of fun guessing game that you could make a bingo card out...
Transparent Light Blue Review
It’s rare that I come across a yuri title that I don’t like. But with Transparent Light Blue, I unfortunately found one.
This one-volume manga, written and drawn by Kiyoko Iwami, is...
ACCA 13-Territory Inspection Department Volumes 5 and 6 Review
The coup d'etat is underway; or rather, it began six months earlier with Jean's crazy orders to visit all 13 districts with barely a moment of downtime between them. Will Schawn,...
My Boy Volume 5 Review
You know how kids cartoons tend to have really literal opening songs? You know, lyrics that specifically explain who's who and what's going on? Well, I feel like if I were...
The Anti-Social Geniuses Review: Silver Spoon Volume 10
Krystallina: In a volume
filled with the return of one of the manga's key characters, food processing,
marketing, and a Russian sister-in-law, there's one main takeaway from Silver
Spoon volume 10:
Never, ever ruin Nishikawa's...