Fujiyama Hyouta - Lover's Flat (Eng. trans.)
Sun, Dec. 9th, 2007 11:32 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
And still not all the manga I read all weekend!
Kouno and Naomichi are next-door neighbors; Kouno's dealing with a drunken night of passion with his friend Natsu, and Naomichi has just had his roommate Kei confess to him. What happens isn't unexpected, dramatic, or brilliant, but there's a depth of character to this that I like.
Fujiyama not only sidesteps the normal shounen-ai tropes that I hate (non-con, exaggerated uke/seme), she ends up with four people who feel very real. I like that her characters do things like dash up the stairs when they finally get a message they've been waiting for, or nervously joke around before having sex for the first time. And I particularly like how her characters work through what would normally be a stupid misunderstanding.
There still are stupid misunderstandings, but they feel driven by character rather than plot, and the other partner reacts very realistically -- frustrated, but also unwilling to let the entire relationship go down in flames because of it. In fact, the general sense that I get from her is that there are no meet cutes or zany switcheroos; relationships here actually require work and effort and trust.
This may make the manga sound like the most boring thing ever, but it's not. Recommended.
Kouno and Naomichi are next-door neighbors; Kouno's dealing with a drunken night of passion with his friend Natsu, and Naomichi has just had his roommate Kei confess to him. What happens isn't unexpected, dramatic, or brilliant, but there's a depth of character to this that I like.
Fujiyama not only sidesteps the normal shounen-ai tropes that I hate (non-con, exaggerated uke/seme), she ends up with four people who feel very real. I like that her characters do things like dash up the stairs when they finally get a message they've been waiting for, or nervously joke around before having sex for the first time. And I particularly like how her characters work through what would normally be a stupid misunderstanding.
There still are stupid misunderstandings, but they feel driven by character rather than plot, and the other partner reacts very realistically -- frustrated, but also unwilling to let the entire relationship go down in flames because of it. In fact, the general sense that I get from her is that there are no meet cutes or zany switcheroos; relationships here actually require work and effort and trust.
This may make the manga sound like the most boring thing ever, but it's not. Recommended.
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Tue, Dec. 11th, 2007 01:50 am (UTC)Thanks!
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Tue, Dec. 11th, 2007 01:57 am (UTC)Mely recced most of Fujiyama Hyouta's stuff (all?), so I am planning on picking up the rest some time too.