Otomen 2 by Aya Kanno: B

otomen2-125This volume presents three episodic tales, two of which focus on Asuka’s challenge to be true to himself despite the expectations of others. In the first of these stories, he acquires an apprentice who wants to use him as a reference on how to be cool and masculine, requiring Asuka to suppress his girly tendencies, and in the other, his mother attempts to set him up in an arranged marriage and manipulates him by warning that her health will suffer if he should thwart her or betray any sort of preference for feminine things. This last story is insanely kooky, but it gives Ryo the opportunity to ride in on a white horse and rescue the about-to-be-wed Asuka, so I can’t fault it too much.

Kanno’s art is very attractive in general, but I was especially impressed by it in this volume because she was able to adopt a completely different style—one reminiscent of ’70s shoujo—to depict the parents of Asuka’s fiancée. What’s more, there are scenes where they are sitting at a table with Asuka’s mom, and seeing the two very different artistic techniques juxtaposed in the same panel is pretty awesome.

The other story in the volume is more of a romantic one. Asuka finds out that Ryo has never celebrated Christmas before, and so plans the perfect Christmas party for her. It’s a nice chapter overall, but the best part is Asuka’s inexplicable fixation upon a yule log as the essential ingredient for the event. I often find straightforward comedies unfunny, but the absurdity of Otomen gets me every time.

Review copy provided by the publisher. Review originally published at Manga Recon.

Beauty Pop 10 by Kiyoko Arai: B-

beautypop10Narumi’s father has goaded him into entering the Scissors Project into the All-Japan Beauty Tournament in order to prove he’s serious about forming his own salon with his schoolmates rather than inherit the family salon. In this final volume, the outcome of both the tournament and the love triangle between Narumi, his friend Ochiai, and protagonist Kiri, is revealed.

I was pretty disappointed in this conclusion. Kiri is sidelined for most of the first half for an incredibly contrived reason—she catches a cold by going out in the rain to forgive the rival hairstylist (I lost count, but I believe he’s the fifth or sixth to appear in the ten-volume series) who stole her special scissors but who we are supposed to care about because he is a sad orphan—and a lot of the romantic momentum built up in the previous volume is squandered. The outcome of the tournament is treated as an afterthought and while we do, courtesy of a comedic bonus story set ten years in the future, ultimately learn which boy Kiri ends up with, we never see her admit any feeling for either of them or witness any reaction from the boy not chosen.

Ultimately, Beauty Pop is a silly and cute tale that shows occasional glimmers of a more satisfying story but fails to deliver in the end. In some ways, I am reminded of the conclusion to Hana-Kimi, which had similar issues involving the unsatisfying resolution to a romantic triangle. How one felt about the final volume of that series would be a good indicator of what to expect from this one.

Review copy provided by the publisher. Review originally published at Manga Recon.

Beauty Pop 9 by Kiyoko Arai: B

bp9From the back cover:
After kissing Kiri accidentally, Narumi struggles to keep his composure during the All-Japan Beauty Tournament. With everything on the line, can the Scissors Project even make it through the preliminaries?

Review:
Sometimes the overall feel of a volume is so cute that I can’t help but like it, even though it also contains myriad things at which I roll my eyes.

We start with the continuation of the All-Japan Beauty Tournament. At the end of volume eight, Narumi and Kiri accidentally bumped lips when they were tripped by a scheming competitor. We resume with both of them sitting, dazed, and realizing just in time that they should get a move on if they don’t want to be eliminated in the first round. Round two involves taming a brat of a kid, which Kiri awesomely does by giving him the haircut of his favorite TV hero, though why she waits 45 minutes into the 60-minute round to actually talk to the kid, I couldn’t say.

The competition adjourns for a week, leaving time for romance drama to ensue! I like that Kiri is pretty nonchalant about the accidental smooch, saying, “I didn’t hate it,” while Narumi is the one who flees and freaks out. When Kiri’s dad is conveniently whisked off to America, extracting a promise from Narumi to look after Kiri, the two spend some time alone wherein Kiri acts clingy because she’s afraid of cockroaches and Narumi valiantly vanquishes one on her behalf. By various means, Ochiai finds out about that, Narumi finds out about Ochiai’s feelings, Ochiai declares that he won’t hold back any longer, and it’s a whole big tangle of cute drama, pretty much.

Now that the focus is on Kiri and the two boys who like her, the annoying side characters are left far in the background and I don’t miss them at all. Arai’s art, delicate and perfect for drawing hair, also excels at more romantic scenes, and there are many panels in which Ochiai’s and Narumi’s softened expressions really catch the eye. Too, I like the gradual way Arai has built up the possibility that Narumi and Kiri could actually feel something for one another; it certainly didn’t seem possible earlier in the series.

Beauty Pop 8 by Kiyoko Arai: B-

bp8From the back cover:
Just as the Scissors Project is getting stronger than ever, forces are at work to discredit Kiri and disband the club. What’s even more surprising is the person who is behind it all…

Review:
Most of what happens in this volume is pretty dumb. There’s a rival stylist, hired by a mysterious boss, whose tasks are to get the Scissors Project to disband and to retrieve a pair of special golden scissors that were given to Kiri a few volumes ago. The rival causes the rest of the students to suspect Kiri of trashing the S.P. club room, but is eventually unveiled in a highly unlikely fashion. His boss then tells Narumi that he can prove he’s serious about the S.P. by entering and winning a tournament.

It’s all incredibly contrived, but this silly plot does serve to provide some good moments. When Narumi catches some girls planning to pull a nasty prank on Kiri, he gives them an earful, not realizing she’s nearby and has overheard. In fact, ever since their talk about why they want to be beauticians, relations have thawed some between them. In this volume, they’re giving each other thank you gifts, we get to see Kiri laugh, and I feel, for the first time, a romantic vibe. Ochiai’s not to be outdone, of course, and tries in his way to protect Kiri, too.

Overall, it’s not a very good volume, but it leaves off just as the tournament’s getting underway, and I expect I shall enjoy that.

Beauty Pop 7 by Kiyoko Arai: B-

bp7From the back cover:
Kiri is undecided about what career she wants to pursue after graduation, but for Narumi it’s plain and simple—he’s always wanted to become a professional hairstylist. Can Narumi’s passion help persuade Kiri to face her dreams?

Review:
The Beauty Pop series is actually split in two parts, and this volume sees the conclusion of the first part, a smattering of bonus stories, and then the resumption of the series as Beauty Pop, Stage 2.

The conclusion to the first part of the series hinges on Kiri finally admitting that she does want to be a beautician after graduation. It’s time for the second-year students to fill out their career choice forms and she dallies over it a bit until Narumi’s passion for cutting hair, and recollections of the happiness of her former makeover subjects, prompts Kiri to make her decision. After talking to Narumi, she actually smiles at him, which, of course, causes him to go “b-bmp,” just like happened to Ochiai after he caught a glimpse of the same rare sight. Even the imposter from the last chapter ties in with the whole “go for your dreams” theme, even if his motivation for impersonating Narumi is totally ridiculous.

The bonus stories are not very good—surprisingly, the one featuring Chisami is the best of the lot. In “Twisted Typhoon,” most of the cast is contrivedly visiting Los Angeles at the same time, and Kiri saves the schedule of a movie shoot her mother is working on by correctly interpreting the drawing made by the temperamental child star who insists on a particular hair style. In “I Want to Be a Prince,” we see Chisami through the eyes of her childhood friend, Takeda, and discover that she’s a lot more lonely than she lets on. There’s one panel of her just waving and smiling sadly to Takeda that single-handedly goes a long way toward making her more tolerable. “Extra-Curricular Daydreaming” is the worst of a lot, about a dog who has returned as the ghost of a human boy to repay Kiri’s kindness to him in his canine life, an aim that he accomplishes by stealing pencil cases and snacks for her. Hana-Kimi did this—randomly inserting a story about the supernatural into its school-based narrative—and I disliked it then, too.

Stage 2 starts with the rather subtle revelation that Kiri has finally joined the Scissors Project. She’s been resistant and apathetic all this time, but now we see her sporting a certain bracelet and then are introduced to the significance of that bracelet a little later on. It seems that Ochiai is getting more serious about marketing the group, and Kiri even seems to be seeking out people to practice on rather than simply stumbling upon folks in need. A Scissors Project performance, with Kiri as a willing participant, ensues, but is interrupted by yet another famous stylist who, for some reason, enjoys interfering with the efforts of amateurs. Yawn.

I’m happy to see the change in Kiri’s outlook and that she is both participating and having comparatively civil conversations with Narumi. But with only three volumes left in the series, I hope the story quits introducing these tedious rivals and starts devoting more of its time to her character arc.

Beauty Pop 6 by Kiyoko Arai: B

bp6From the back cover:
The entire gang travels to Karuizawa to hone their skills. There, they meet Chihiro Osawa, a famous but nasty hairstylist who breaks Kiri’s scissors on purpose! But even more distressing to Narumi is a dream he has about Kiri…

Review:
This series really is at its best when it focuses on makeover challenges. In this volume, Kiri encounters the unfriendly Osawa, who gets peeved when she fixes the extremely curly hair of a girl whose request for help he had sneeringly ignored. His destruction of her scissors is enough to spur Kiri into anger—a rarity—which leads her to accept his challenge for a public showdown. Not only are such challenges themselves fun, but I enjoy seeing the kind side of Kiri as she helps solve beauty problems for average girls.

After Kiri’s efforts in the contest attract notice from the media, Ochiai characteristically seizes the opportunity to announce that she’s the daughter of Seiji Koshiba, a legend in the business. And here’s another parallel to sports manga: Kiri’s father, Seiji, was the best in his day, but retired from the spotlight to live in relative obscurity and train his offspring for greatness. I am strongly reminded of the relationship between Nanjiro Echizen and his son, Ryoma, in The Prince of Tennis. I think I even spotted an “Ero Ero” magazine in one panel, though Seiji is less upfront about perusing nudie mags than Nanjiro is.

The rest of the volume deals with the beginning of a new school year, the appearance of a troublemaking imposter, and Narumi’s confused feelings about Kiri after learning she was his first love and experiencing a dream in which she confesses her love to him. Due to looks and his position as Kiri’s rival, Narumi is definitely the guy one would assume would end up with feelings for her, but I don’t really buy it yet, given how antagonistic and jerky he’s been thus far. It’s not just that I don’t think he loves her, it’s that I think he’s too immature to love anyone, as exhibited by the whole “icky girls give me a rash” thing he’s got going on. I’d love it if this series subverted convention and had Kiri end up with Seki or Ochiai instead, but I doubt that it will.

Beauty Pop 5 by Kiyoko Arai: B-

bp5From the back cover:
Narumi’s father, Yujiro, a world famous hairstylist with salons across the globe, has never been able to defeat Kiri’s father, Seiji, in a hairstyling competition. Will Narumi be able to surpass his father by winning against Kiri?

Review:
That’s a really strange blurb, considering that the challenge Narumi poses to Kiri, after hearing about their fathers’ rivalry, goes ignored by her. Instead, this volume offers a mixed bag of some good moments surrounded by some extremely annoying ones.

The bad:
* Chisami, Narumi’s middle schooler sister, is extremely irritating and spends the volume coming to the high school in search of her “prince.” There’s a very dumb chapter in which she gets kidnapped, too.
* The team makes over a wannabe model who is afraid of men, leading to a silly cross-dressing gag.
* Iori acts inexplicably stupidly regarding a doll in Kiri’s possession that ultimately leads to the revelation that it was she who bested Narumi in a competition back in elementary school, his sole defeat.

The good:
* There are some nice bits with Kiri and her father where she recalls watching a video of a competition he’d been in during the height of his popularity.
* I like how Kiri cares for the makeover recipients and how their utter happiness afterwards is one of the few things that can make her smile.
* I continue to love anything related to Ochiai’s feelings for Kiri and Aoyama’s (Kiri’s friend) feelings for Ochiai and her reaction to the knowledge that he likes Kiri.
* I still love Shampoo, and how he’s incorporated into the background of some scenes. There’s a really cute one where he’s sleeping on Ochiai’s coat.
* In one of her sidebar columns, Arai-sensei reveals that, to properly approximate the lack of Kiri’s drawing ability, she commissioned her five-year-old nephew to create the drawings that would appear in the manga as Kiri’s.

This series could be so much better, and it’s frustrating. At this point, I’m not even sure if I’m going to keep it after I finish it (I usually do). On the one hand, I can’t see myself wanting to read it again, but on the other, I’d be sad to lose all of Shampoo’s cuteness. I guess I could just hang on to it for the good bits.

Beauty Pop 4 by Kiyoko Arai: B

bp4From the back cover:
Kiri steps in to help the injured Narumi in a Scissors Project beauty battle. But before Kiri can complete her magic, reminders of an incident in her past make her too fearful to continue with the cut.

Review:
For a minute there, this series was on the verge of improvement. Here’s what it did that pleased me:

1. A new character is introduced who’s actually not annoying. Seki, called Ken-niisan by Kiri, is a masseur who, in addition to being mellow himself, has the ability to mellow out others around him, even the volatile Narumi. I also really like that Kiri seeks out his presence; he’s the only boy she’s ever done that with and, currently, the only boy of the cast I can actually see her becoming romantically involved with.

2. One of the Scissors Project boys begins to develop feelings for Kiri, and it’s not the one you’d expect.

3. Once Ochiai unveils his plan for the Scissors Project club to carry their talents into the professional realm, and urges everyone to begin practicing their skills, there’s actually a kind of sports manga vibe going on that’s quite fun. Also, Narumi’s challenger in the competition is fond of calling out the names of his haircuts, like “Condor cut!” which is totally a sports manga thing.

Alas, by the end of the volume I was irritated again, because Narumi’s very annoying young sister appears, and we are apparently about to sit through a tiresome story where she won’t go away while she searches for her prince (a guy who helped disentangle her hair from some shrubbery and who is actually, of course, Kiri). The thing about Narumi getting a rash whenever he touches a girl is also pretty dumb. Sigh.

The Private Patient by P. D. James: B

Book description:
In James’s stellar fourteenth Adam Dalgliesh mystery, the charismatic police commander knows the case of Rhoda Gradwyn, a 47-year-old journalist murdered soon after undergoing the removal of an old disfiguring scar at a private plastic surgery clinic in Dorset, may be his last. Dalgliesh probes the convoluted tangle of motives and hidden desires that swirl around the clinic, Cheverell Manor, and its grimly fascinating suspects in the death of Gradwyn, herself a stalker of minds driven by her lifelong passion for rooting out the truth people would prefer left unknown and then selling it for money.

Review:
The Private Patient isn’t bad—I think it’d be impossible for P. D. James to write a bad novel—but it isn’t very gripping. It’s written in her usual style, very descriptive of setting, even down to the retirement home accomodations of an obscure family solicitor, and spending a lot of time with the victim and her environs before the crime actually takes place. Like most of James’ novels, this one involves a small institution of some kind with a precarious financial future, and a limited cast of subjects connected with it.

Perhaps I’m a bit jaded, but I’d expected a few more twists and turns out of this. There’s one point, quite near the end, but not near enough that it seemed a culprit should really be revealed, when all evidence seemed to point to one person. “Ah,” I reasoned, “this person is the red herring. We will now get the twist ending when it will turn out to have been Y instead of X!” Except all that happens is that X commits a completely unnecessary additional act of violence and gets found out, leaving me going, “Oh. It was X. Huh.”

Much like the previous book, The Lighthouse, this could possibly be the last in the Dalgleish series. The whole reason Dalgleish’s squad is on the case in the first place is because a wealthy client of the clinic got her politically connected hubby to pull some strings. This rankles with Dalgleish quite a lot, as one might imagine, and the increasing politicization of his squad, along with the possibility that it will be eliminated in forthcoming budget cuts, makes him ponder retirement. The door’s still open, however, as the novel ends without Dalgleish making a firm decision in either way.

If this is the last novel, I’ll be slightly disappointed in the ending, which doesn’t focus on him at all. Instead, we get an epilogue about those still at the clinic as well as an attendee’s view of Dalgleish’s wedding. Then again, perhaps this slipping out of the limelight and into quiet, happy domesticity exactly parallels Dalgleish’s fate. That’d be nice.

We Were There 4 by Yuki Obata: A

wewerethere4Nana thought it was a dream come true when Yano, the boy she liked, told her that he returned her feelings and they became a couple. Some problems have become apparent in their relationship, however. Early on, Nana was willing to go along with Yano’s moods and demands since he had experienced so much tragedy in his past. Now, though, she realizes that simply accepting Yano’s odd behavior isn’t going to help him, so she begins to challenge some of his actions. Unfortunately for her, her attempts to get closer to Yano and draw out more information from him about his past and his feelings for his ex-girlfriend bring forth several revelations that seriously threaten their relationship.

We Were There is not unlike NANA in that it can be simultaneously very good and very painful to read. There’s a lot of raw emotion in this series, from Nana’s reaction to Yano’s devastating secrets to her realization that no matter how much she loves him, it isn’t enough to mend the wounds he suffered because of his ex-girlfriend’s betrayal. Yano comes off as the villain in a lot of what transpires, but it’s evident that he’s in a lot of pain, too, and probably somewhat mentally unstable.

With Nana and Yano seemingly so inevitably doomed by volume four, I honestly have no idea where the story could go from here. This is definitely not your average shojo high school romance.

Review copy provided by the publisher. Review originally published at Manga Recon.