May 2, 2023
In short, if you are a fan of comfy slice of life manga with some depth to it, this is definitely worth your time.
Story
Hana is but a normal girl who lives on a small island with a population of mere 600. She loves reciting, and is rather good at it, but she only ever recited stories for little children on the island - until Mizuki, a student from the high school she's going to attend scouts her out for her talents, and invites her to join the broadcasting club.
What this manga is, is pretty much a very elaborate introduction to the world of reciting. Following
...
Hana, an unskilled but talented girl as she joins the broadcasting club with the intention of competing at the nationwide tournament N-con.
The author goes into very detailed, but not alienating lengths to absorb you into the world of just broadcasting in general, into reciting, annoucement, even sound producing. Even for someone like me who would consistently fall asleep at every announcement or recital I ever attended, this manga manages to make reciting look interesting - an amazing feat for manga, a medium with no sound. In the story, paragraphs the characters recite will very well fit what they are trying to convey to the other character, the excerpt matching the theme completely, with the panels quite literally transporting you to another world... My words here simply will not do it justice on how well it is implemented.
Characters
Every one of them have enough flair and depth on their own. Its quite impossible to treat as if a character "isn't there". Hana goes through at least one chapter, introducing, or letting her know better about each and every character through natural means, alternating between everyone as she gets to know her new club members better. By extension, us the audience gets to know them, understand them, and eventually like them as well. A noteworthy mention here is An. Practically a typical tsun-no-dere even coming with the twintails, her ambition to be number 1 and to win is not only NOT annoying for once, watching her slowly opening up and bonding with Hana through rather natural means is not only surprising, but well done, and never comes off as irritating.
Art
The art is definitely the best of Musshu, out of all their other works. Characters have varied means of expression, especially Hana. Clean to look, adorable to spectate. More often than not, it threatens to drag me into the world of which the characters are reciting about, which is really, really exceptional - again, reciting is a boring topic, and hard to portray in a soundless medium like manga.
Conclusion
Overall, a great, light hearted slice of life (with hints of it becoming a bit serious later on) with a cast of lovable characters with an excellent introduction to the world of reciting and announcement. This would make a great fucking anime.
Reviewer’s Rating: 9
What did you think of this review?
Nice
0
Love it
0
Funny
0
Confusing
0
Well-written
0
Creative
0Show all