Review – Church Going

Posted February 16, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Church Going

Church Going: A Stonemason's Guide to the Churches of the British Isles

by Andrew Ziminski

Genres: History, Non-fiction
Pages: 401
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

An insightful and charming history of Britain's churches - by an author who spends his life working in them

Churches are many things to us - they are places of worship, vibrant community hubs and oases of calm reflection. To know a church is to hold a key to the past that unlocks an understanding of our shared history.

Andrew Ziminski has spent decades as a stonemason and church conservator, acting as an informal guide to curious visitors. Church Going is his handbook to the medieval churches of the British Isles, in which he reveals their fascinating histories, features and furnishings, from flying buttresses to rood screens, lichgates to chancels. Beautifully written and richly illustrated, it is a celebration of British architectural history.

I found Andrew Ziminski’s Church Going really soothingly disconnected from anything I have strong opinions about or really need to know, so I could just enjoy slowly making my way through it, learning some stuff, letting some stuff just go in one ear and back out of the other. It has some black and white illustrations, though now and then it could’ve benefitted from some high-quality colour illustrations in order to get a good look at details.

Mostly, it was just fun reading Ziminski’s musings about churches and working on them, and learning more about the exact functions of bits of the church I hadn’t always thought about. I did find though that it could’ve done with some more editing/proofreading — missing words, sentences that didn’t quite make sense, typos, etc. A few slipping through is pretty much bound to happen, but I found it really jumped out at me in this one.

It did also jump around a bit; sometimes he’d refer to bits of a church that he wouldn’t then define/explain until later, which was a bit irritating — there wasn’t even a page reference!

Note: there are also no numbered citations and the “further reading” section isn’t extensive. So bear that in mind, for what it’s worth.

Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)

Tags: , , , ,

Divider

Fantasy With Friends: Tolkien

Posted February 16, 2026 by Nicky in General / 2 Comments

Fantasy With Friends: A Disccusion Meme hosted by Pages Unbound

New blog feature time: I’m gonna join in with the Fantasy With Friends discussion meme (hosted at Pages Unbound) whenever I get chance through 2026!

I ran across this discussion meme on another blog, and was tempted to take part last week when the discussion topic was dragons, but life got away from me. But could I really miss the opportunity to stick my oar in about Tolkien? For that’s this week’s discussion topic:

What do you think of the arguments that The Lord of the Rings presents good and evil as black and white?

Now, I’m going to apologise in advance both because I studied Tolkien’s work during my master’s degree, and because it’s been a long time since then and I’m definitely rusty. The thing with Tolkien that I think is a really important starting point is to remember that he was writing what he thought of as mythology: “a mythology for England” (though this is a phrase used about his work and not something he actually said himself). He was writing a mythology/history to go with and explain languages that he’d come up with before he created the world, and which grew and changed as he built the world as well.

It’s not too unusual for mythology to be pretty one-sided, presenting things in terms of black or white. There are definitely places where Tolkien does this: there are no good orcs or goblins, they are only capable of destruction and hateful acts, and we see no hints that they could ever be otherwise (although it is implied in The Silmarillion that they were originally elves who were twisted and corrupted). Sauron himself is unequivocally evil, as is the Ring… though further back in the mythology, you find that Sauron was a Maia who became corrupted by Melkor, so it’s not even 100% straightforward there. At the very least, it seems like Tolkien is giving us characters who have been corrupted beyond redemption, with whom there can be no reconciliation or compromise — and depending on which version of his notes and stories you believe, they may have simply been created evil (as Treebeard says trolls were, in envy and mockery of the Ents).

At the same time, there is some nuance: if you look at the characters — particularly the humans and hobbits — they’re actually pretty split, not just down race lines (though this happens with the Southrons for instance) but within racial groups and even individual characters too. The elves tend to be all good, but among hobbits you’ve got your Ted Sandyman, among humans your Grima Wormtongue and Bill Ferny… And of course there’s characters like Denethor, Boromir and Gollum who fall in various ways, but also served good in ways large and small along the way.

There’s also Treebeard, who stands a bit apart and comments on the sides being drawn up in a fairly ambivalent way: despite them being clearly delineated as good and evil, he feels he’s not on either side, because neither side has care for him and his trees. Tom Bombadil is similarly ambiguous: the Ring has no power over him, but neither has the argument that he should serve the greater good.

Some characters are given second chances, too, opportunities for redemption: Boromir shakes off the madness of the Ring and defends Merry and Pippin to his death, Théoden is shaken out of inaction and doubt, Denethor has the chance to help Gandalf and avoid succumbing to despair, Grima is offered a chance to turn back from serving Saruman, Gollum is offered a second chance by Frodo, and Gandalf even offers a substantial second chance to Saruman himself.

I don’t know how persuasive I’d find that argument, though, since only Boromir and ThĂ©oden take those second chances, and ThĂ©oden was substantially bewitched into that state — bewitchment removed, his doubts and fears are pretty much gone. Boromir served good once temptation was removed, and it’s unclear that he could or would have done so if the Ring had still been present. Sure, not everyone will take a second chance when offered, but most of the characters seem inherently unable to accept it. Gollum tries (under fear of death), and succeeds for a time, but can’t stop himself falling into evil again. Does he choose, or is he just built for evil? The Ring almost immediately corrupted him, driving him to murder his best friend to possess it…

And for the other side, you have a lot of characters who are simply incorruptible, including many or all of the elves (depending on what you believe about the creation of orcs), Aragorn, Gandalf, Faramir, Sam, etc. So you get the sense that for Tolkien, at the very least some people are inherently corruptible (Gollum, Grima, Boromir) and some are inherently incorruptible no matter what temptation befalls (Aragorn, Faramir, Sam). Frodo’s example pushes against that a little bit — ultimately he decides to keep the Ring for himself — but then that’s forestalled so quickly by his own past decision to spare Gollum (because he’s a Good Person) that you might feel it barely counts: he’s saved from falling to it because he’s inherently a good person.

(As a side note, as a lover of Faramir’s character, I hated that he was genuinely tempted in the movie version. I reconciled myself to it because narratively it doesn’t make a lot of sense for the movie: the Ring is supposed to be able to tempt just about anyone, and then Tolkien gave us a lot of characters who see the danger and refuse to be put in positions where they’ll be tempted beyond their power to resist. Faramir’s ability to lightly refuse the Ring when he has Frodo in his power in Ithilien undermines the Ring’s power. For Tolkien, that’s fine: we’re meant to understand that Faramir would be corrupted if he took it, but he has the power to refuse it due to being built more than a little like Aragorn, with references repeatedly tying him closer to his NĂșmenĂłrean descent than Boromir or Denethor are. Cinematically, that’s a lot harder to convey.)

As all the wordage implies, it’s definitely a bit more complicated than just Black And White, Good And Bad, at least in some places in the story. I think mostly my first point is the important part, though: Tolkien was writing in a mythic register that needed big clashes between good and evil. He wove in moments of ambiguity and humanity, but much of his intent was to write about characters larger than life, heroes and villains like the Norse and other mythological heroes that inspired him, so I think the lack of nuance is baked in quite a bit by the fact that he wasn’t thinking in terms of writing a modern novel with believable characters, believable stakes, etc. Some of his decisions in that light sit incredibly badly, and are rightly critiqued, but the picture is a bit more mixed and muddled than some commentators have said.

I feel like I could’ve written about a thousand words more clarifying my points and going deeper into various thoughts about it (such as how genuinely tempted Galadriel was when tested by Frodo), but I’m going to stop here. Looking forward to other people’s answers to this question!

Tags: , , ,

Divider

Review – The Spare Man

Posted February 15, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 Comments

Review – The Spare Man

The Spare Man

by Mary Robinette Kowal

Genres: Crime, Mystery, Science Fiction
Pages: 357
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

Tesla Crane, one of the richest women in the world, is on her honeymoon on an interplanetary space liner, cruising between Earth and Mars. She’s traveling incognito and is reveling in her anonymity. Then someone is murdered and her husband is named as the prime suspect. To save him from the frame-up, Tesla will risk exposure and face demons from her past.
Even though doing so might make her the next victim.

Mary Robinette Kowal’s The Spare Man is a fun mystery set in space, on a cruise liner to Mars, which uses the setting well to help shape the mystery: differences in gravity, technology, the delay in communicating with an earth-based lawyer, Tesla Crane’s status as a celebrity (and ways of handling that via technological and less technological methods of disguise).

I enjoyed the characters and their bond (even if it sometimes felt like they should maybe focus and not canoodle), and the portrayal of Tesla’s disabilities and how they affect her investigation — and of course, gotta love her support dog, Gimlet. All of those trappings help it feel less like just a Golden Age mystery in space, and also an attempt to talk about and show us specific characters and how they cope with a mystery. The fact that Tesla could dial her pain up and down was convenient, the idea of the technology does make sense (we have things that might be the beginnings of that already, after all), so I think it was a mostly-reasonable effort at having Tesla take part in some of the action without writing out her disabilities altogether, especially as she later faces consequences in terms of more pain.

I’d probably have liked to see her use her technological skills a bit more; there are reasons she doesn’t (related to her trauma), but… still. It was a way for her to contribute to solving the mystery a bit more actively, since mostly she didn’t fully see what Shal was working out. Instead, her money/status was often the key, which kinda felt like certain rich tech bros taking credit for being smart when they’ve actually just got practically infinite resources. Not my favourite aspect.

I diiiid find that at certain points the mystery seemed obvious to me, and was thus unnecessarily drawn out, but I still mostly enjoyed how the pieces came together. I did have a portion of it at least figured out before the reveal, though that was partly guesswork rather than fair play, I think.

Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)

Tags: , , , , ,

Divider

Review – Star and Hedgehog

Posted February 14, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Star and Hedgehog

Star and Hedgehog

by Nayuta Nago

Genres: Manga, Romance
Pages: 164
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

Ikumi Chiba is home for the summer from Tokyo, where he goes to university. Upon returning, Ikumi meets one of the gardeners who works in his family's yard, Harukiyo. Although Harukiyo looks tough and confident at first glance, Ikumi discovers that he is actually quite quiet and shy... Or maybe he is talkative and friendly, and he just doesn't like Ikumi!? They say 20% of the people in the world won't like you... Has Ikumi met his match?! Or maybe there's another reason why Harukiyo acts that way?!

Nayuta Nago’s Star and Hedgehog was a bit of a random choice for me, something I found a bit randomly while exploring the manga in Comics Plus. The art was fairly generic-manga, but not bad, and it all felt a bit rushed and not really fleshed out. Harukiyo is kind of cold and grumpy initially, but it quickly turns out it’s because he has a massive crush, and he and Izumi leap into a relationship… then have a few months apart just talking on the phone… and then leap toward having sex.

In other words, it doesn’t feel like it flows very well, and it feels a bit insta-love-y, because they don’t really connect about anything except finding one another attractive and maaaaybe a bit Harukiyo’s interest in plants (they meet when his family are working in Izumi’s family’s garden).

Harukiyo’s brother’s relationship with him is kinda cute, though.

Anyway, not a massive winner for me, but not awful.

Rating: 2/5 (“it was okay”)

Tags: , , , ,

Divider

Stacking the Shelves & The Sunday Post

Posted February 14, 2026 by Nicky in General / 24 Comments

It’s the weekend again, and I’m going into it more rested than I came out of my holiday. How? I don’t know! But there it is.

Books acquired this week

I started reading the Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation manhua last weekend, and ended up steaming through it. Since it caught my reading mood, I decided I’d check how much Bookshop.org credit I had, and whether I had any Waterstones stamp cards completed. I had plenty of credit, and two stamp cards complete, so I indulged!

Cover of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation manhua vol 6 Cover of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation manhua vol 7 Cover of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation manhua vol 8

Cover of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation manhua vol 9 Cover of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation manhua vol 10 Cover of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation manhua vol 11 Cover of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation manhua vol 12

I also preordered volume 13, which luckily is due out in March (and completes the main story). I wonder if there’ll be a volume covering the extras, or at least some of them? I have no idea, but at least volume 13 will round off the main story.

This month’s British Library Crime Classic subscription book also arrived, and it’s a new-to-me E.C.R. Lorac book, which is excellent news!

Cover of The Double Turn by Carol Carnac (AKA E.C.R. Lorac)

Finally, I also got some review copies via Netgalley. First up was Nghi Vo’s newest in the Singing Hills series, which is a series I really adore, and then the new T. Kingfisher! I haven’t read Swordheart yet, but this gives me extra impetus to get on with it and do so.

Cover of Daggerbound by T. Kingfisher Cover of A Long and Speaking Silence by Nghi Vo

I haven’t read as much poetry this week, but I did snag two more collections to try from the National Poetry Library:

Cover of Duino Elegies by Rainer Maria Rilke Cover of Altar by Desree

Loans from the National Poetry Library only last 14 days, so I need to get round to these two sooner rather than later. I already read Altar, but I need to get round to the Rilke too.

Posts from this week

As usual, let’s start with the roundup of reviews:

And there were a couple of other posts!

What I’m reading

It’s been a good reading week! Or at least it felt like one, and that’s what counts. It’s mostly been manhua, not too surprisingly, but there’s a couple of other books in there too. Here’s what I finished up this week that I plan to review on the blog:

Cover of Solo Leveling (light novel) vol 7, by Chugong Cover of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation manhua vol 1 Cover of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation manhua vol 2 Cover of A History of England in 25 Poems by Catherine Clarke Cover of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation manhua vol 3

Cover of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation manhua vol 4 Cover of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation manhua vol 5 Cover of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation manhua vol 6 Cover of Altar by Desree Cover of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation manhua vol 7

Reading plans for the weekend… well, more manhua, for sure, and more of T. Kingfisher’s Wolf Worm, and back to my reread of Nghi Vo’s Singing Hills novellas ready for the new one!

Linking up with Reading Reality’s Stacking the Shelves, Caffeinated Reviewer’s The Sunday Post, the Sunday Salon over at Readerbuzz, and It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? at The Book Date.

Tags: , ,

Divider

Review – Food for the Dead

Posted February 13, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Food for the Dead

Food for the Dead

by Charlotte Shevchenko Knight

Genres: Poetry
Pages: 80
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

With this searingly powerful first collection, Charlotte Shevchenko Knight gives the current war in Ukraine some much-needed human focus, while examining its brutal aggression within a wider and more accurate historical context.

Central to this book is ‘a timeline of hunger’, a lyric sequence which examines the legacy of the Holodomor (‘death by hunger’ in Ukrainian) – Stalin’s man-made famine of the 1930s. This long poem opens in Kyiv in 2021 – ‘brief visitations / of appetite / I devour / beetroot / its juices / running / down my lips / blood / of the past’ – and closes in Donetsk in 1929: ‘we burst the balloon / skin of tomatoes / between our teeth / seeds running down chins / like confetti / & we already know / every meal / should be celebrated.’ Through the poet’s sensitive approach to the historical, moving from that genocide of the early 1930s, then on through the Second World War, the Chornobyl disaster, to modern-day invaded Ukraine, we understand that within their ‘bones Holodomor / lives on’.

Both a howl of anguish and an eloquent counter-song against totalitarianism, this is a book about invasion, war, destruction and death, but also about the bonds of humanity, family and a history of oppression – about staying alive while always hungry.

Charlotte Shevchenko Knight’s Food for the Dead is a debut collection, as I understand it, and it’s full of poems reckoning with her family’s past, the past of Ukraine, and the legacy still marked in people’s bodies today — particularly the legacies of Holodomor (which are likely to have marked women on an epigenetic level, passing down vulnerabilities, as the Dutch hunger winter did).

It also discusses the way the Ukrainian language has been attacked, and defiantly sprinkles Ukrainian words throughout (introduced via a glossary which worked quite well in the ebook version, and then used without further definition in later poems). I thought this might annoy me more than it did, but at least in the ebook version it was pretty well done. In a print version, it’d probably work better with footnotes… but I’ve only seen the ebook version, and can’t comment on how it looks in print.

I didn’t love every single one of the poems here, but I enjoyed Shevchenko Knight’s imagery and use of language more often than not. The horrible hunger haunts the whole collection, and the reader.

I liked that for one poem there was a family picture as well, making it clear what it sprang from: a literal tree full of the poet’s family.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

Tags: , , ,

Divider

Reviews – Strangers and Intimates

Posted February 12, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 Comments

Reviews – Strangers and Intimates

Strangers and Intimates: The Rise and Fall of Private Life

by Tiffany Jenkins

Genres: History, Non-fiction
Pages: 434
Rating: five-stars
Synopsis:

From ancient times to our digital present, Strangers and Intimates traces the dramatic emergence of private life, uncovering how it became a protected domain, cherished as a space for intimacy, self-discovery and freedom. In this sweeping history, Tiffany Jenkins, an acclaimed cultural historian, takes readers on an epic journey, from the strict separations of public and private in ancient Athens to the moral rigidity of the Victorian home, and from the feminists of the 1970s who declared that ‘the personal is political’ to the boundary-blurring demands of our digital age.

Strangers and Intimates is both a celebration of the private realm and a warning: as social media, surveillance and the expectations of constant openness reshape our lives, are we in danger of losing a part of ourselves? Jenkins reveals how privacy shaped the modern world and why it remains crucial for our personal and collective freedom – and why this freedom is now in mortal danger.

Today, as we share more than ever before and digital surveillance watches our every move, Jenkins asks a timely question: can private life survive the demands of the twenty-first century?

What does it mean to have a private life?

Tiffany Jenkins’ Strangers and Intimates: The Rise and Fall of Private Life is a history of privacy from the point where something we’d recognise as a concept of private life started to emerge (the rise of Protestantism) to more or less the present.

A lot of it wasn’t super surprising to me in terms of the facts and influences, but it was funny to think that we have less privacy now than we used to, and voluntarily so; I guess in the back of my head I knew it, but it hadn’t struck me so forcibly until now. Some of us (myself included) give up a lot of privacy by talking about all kinds of details on the internet that might never have been known fifty years ago. Sometimes that’s an improvement, allowing others to see they’re not alone and build communities and connections that could never otherwise have been made.

Sometimes… less so. I even wonder sometimes if reviewing every book I read like this is entirely good for me, and how many thoughts I even have that I keep up in my head just for myself. I know why I put everything out there (because then I have more control over the narrative about myself, a lesson learned in school when I was outed to everyone, and people read between the lines in horrible and unfair ways) — but this book did make me sit and wonder what it’d be like to be otherwise. (Look at me doing it right now, though!)

I guess somehow I hadn’t really thought about how flexible and changing our concept of “privacy” actually is, and how my definition of “privacy” is different to the previous generation’s, and very different to that of the generation before them. Following it through history like this has been fascinating and eye-opening.

I found the discussion of Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky in the context of the erosion of privacy a bit heart-rending, honestly. Mostly for her… but yeah, also for him. There was a world where his private life was just his private life, where politicians having affairs were irrelevant, and it perceptibly changed and in part it changed around him, for political expedience. It was a trend that was visible already, but… still. The book demonstrates clearly that we weren’t there yet then, and what happened to Clinton and Lewinsky changed things.

Lots of food for thought here, and thank goodness, numbered citations, a bibliography, and an index.

Rating: 5/5 (“loved it”)

Tags: , , , ,

Divider

Review – Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation (light novel), vol 4

Posted February 11, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation (light novel), vol 4

Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation

by MĂČ Xiāng TĂłng XiĂč

Genres: Fantasy, Light Novels, Romance
Pages: 377
Series: Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation (LN) #4
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

THE LONG WAY HOME

History stands poised to repeat itself as Wei Wuxian and Lan Wangji are besieged by walking corpses atop the Burial Mounds. It is here fate offers them a second chance to protect their loved ones and unmask the true instigator of this grisly onslaught. As shocking revelations shake the cultivation world to its very core, the unlikely couple becomes preoccupied with other matters–like an evening of drunken impulse that may push their budding relationship into bold new territory.

Volume four of MXTX’s Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation has a looot of fun stuff, like A-Yuan (and of course, discovering who he is now, and what he is to Wei Wuxian and Lang Wangji). The drunk scene is excruciating (please, Lan Zhan, noooo, don’t do that) but also kind of sweet, and we also get some development on Wei Wuxian’s side. He’s not going to be clueless all the way to the end! Woooo! The scene with him in the tree is adorable.

It is of course also painful as heck: Wei Wuxian giving up his Golden Core and Jiang Cheng repeatedly just trash-talking him not knowing what he’s done, and the whole bit with the survivors of the Wen family, and knowing that everyone will always blame Wei Wuxian no matter what he does… arrghhh. And, of course… Jiang Yanli…

I am losing track of what happens in which volume because it’s written as one continuous story without obvious breaking points, dodging forward and back between the present and the past, but I’m pretty much used to it at this point.

At this point I’m already reading fic, though, so you can see I’m solidly sold on the whole thing.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

Tags: , , , , ,

Divider

WWW Wednesday

Posted February 11, 2026 by Nicky in General / 6 Comments

Cover of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation manhua vol 5What have you recently finished reading?

Several volumes of the Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation manhua! I’m quite enjoying it, because having read the light novel recently, it’s helping the plot and characters fall into place, little details I didn’t notice are popping out, and stuff I couldn’t picture (due to having aphantasia) is, well, right there, by the very nature of the medium. I’m on the Yi City arc, having my heart broken all over again.

Cover of Domination by Alice RobertsWhat are you currently reading?

A couple of things, but most actively it’s Alice Roberts’ Domination: The Fall of the Roman Empire and the Rise of Christianity. So far it’s low on Roman Empire and high on Celtic Christianity, largely using sources like hagiographies and place names, which is a bit slow. The next section says it’s about archaeology, though, and I look forward to that — I’ve loved Roberts’ books like Ancestors and Crypt, and I think the archaeology is likely to be a strong point of the book.

It’s fundamentally not my interest, though — I’m more reading it because I like Roberts’ other books — so I imagine I’ll be working through it for a while.

Cover of Agnes Aubert's Mystical Cat Shelter by Heather FawcettWhat will you be reading next?

Needless to say, it’ll be more of the MDZS manhua… but other than that, I hope to get back to Heather Fawcett’s Agnes Aubert’s Mystical Cat Shelter, and maybe Molly O’Neill’s Nightshade & Oak, since both of them are books I received to review.

Excitingly I also have the next Singing Hills novella by Nghi Vo, so that might jump the queue.

Tags: ,

Divider

Review – Do You Really Want Only a Meal? vol 1

Posted February 10, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Do You Really Want Only a Meal? vol 1

Do You Really Want Only A Meal?

by Yasu Tadano

Genres: Manga, Romance
Pages: 162
Series: Do You Really Want Only A Meal? #1
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

Masamune Hanzawa, a 27-year-old office worker with no time for love or cooking, reluctantly tries a housekeeping service at his section chief’s suggestion. Enter Natsuki, a charming college student and his boss’s son, who quickly captures Masamune’s heart. After their first meeting, Natsuki boldly confesses his feelings, leaving Masamune torn. Though undeniably attracted to Natsuki, Masamune hesitates due to their age difference and the potential complications of dating his superior’s son. As they navigate meals and growing emotions, Masamune must decide whether to embrace this unexpected chance at love—or let it slip away.

Volume one of Yasu Tadano’s Do You Really Only Want a Meal? is very cute, with a weird mix of love at first sight and taking it slow that I wasn’t sure about. Natsuki is younger than Masamune, and the son of his boss, ending up meeting him because he looks for a housekeeping service for someone to cook for him.

They don’t even get as far as kissing in this volume, despite Natsuki almost instantly saying he loves Masamune (and Masamune pretty quickly getting a crush too), which was a bit of a relief. There are genuine reasons it wouldn’t be a good idea, but they keep finding themselves drawn together, and I did find myself believing in the chemistry.

I’ll read volume two when it’s out, especially if it comes up on Comics Plus (love that I get access to sooo many graphic novels and manga via my library). I might even buy it.

Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)

Tags: , , , ,

Divider