Very original concept.
Kokoro sees two women/girls together, sketches their love story after her imagination and afterwards we get to see a glimpse of the women's actual realities.
Each of the short stories (both the daydreams and the reality afterwards) are very interesting; I'm honestly surprised some of these haven't been used for a stand-alone or a whole manga series. (or they have and I just don't know about it.)
The manga is similar to an anthalogy, and basically is, except it keeps going back to the main story, which is Kokoro's life. She herself is lesbian and has known for while that she has no interest
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Alternative TitlesJapanese: ゆりでなる♥えすぽわーる More titlesInformationType: Manga
Volumes: Unknown
Chapters: Unknown
Status: Publishing
Published: Mar 20, 2019 to ?
Serialization:
Comic Ryu Web Authors:
Naoi, Mai (Story & Art) Statistics Ranked: #38672 2 based on the top manga page. Please note that 'R18+' titles are excluded. Popularity: #11845
Members: 1,522
Favorites: 40 Available AtResources | Reviews
Filtered Results: 3 / 3
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Your Feelings Categories Sep 5, 2024
The cute, shoujo art style is a trojan horse - this manga gets HEAVY. But the tone of patriarchal horror is balanced well with slice of life comedy. The serialized story alternates by chapter with an anthology of twists on familiar yuri stories, which give welcome breaks from the drama of the overarching plot.
Yuri Espoir showcases the suffocating disempowerment of patriarchy inflicted on young girls and how well intentioned men can still perpetuate this power structure, even through inaction. Without spoiling anything, the primary antagonist, Kokoro's fiancé, is a well written and interesting take on a sexist man thus far. The banality of his ... Jun 18, 2022
This manga centers on Kokoro, a teenage yuri fanatic who's dreading her impending arranged marriage. She seeks solace by escaping into the romantic fantasies she concocts for the pairs of women she and her friend observe while people-watching.
The story has a cyclical rhythm of plot-advancing drama, Kokoro's charming daydreams, and vignettes of the subjects' real relationships (each of which are surprisingly interesting and could have been their own one-shots, if not series). The art could certainly be better on a technical level, but it more than makes up for it in creativity. It's absolutely full of interesting compositions and clever scene transitions. As of writing this, ... |