Author picture

鶴谷香央理

Author of BL Metamorphosis, Volume 1

11 Works 568 Members 12 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: 鶴谷香央理

Series

Works by 鶴谷香央理

BL Metamorphosis, Volume 1 (2018) 176 copies, 4 reviews
BL Metamorphosis, Volume 2 (2018) — Author — 117 copies, 1 review
BL Metamorphosis, Volume 3 (2019) — Author — 92 copies, 2 reviews
BL Metamorphosis, Volume 4 (2020) — Author — 77 copies, 2 reviews
BL Metamorphosis, Volume 5 (2021) 67 copies, 3 reviews
Don't like this (2020) 8 copies
METAMORFOSIS BL 05 (2021) 2 copies
Metamorfosi (Vol. 5) (2021) 2 copies
Metamorfozy. 1 (2021) 1 copy
Metamorfozy. 5 (2022) 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
鶴谷香央理
Gender
female
Nationality
Japan
Associated Place (for map)
Japan

Members

Reviews

13 reviews
A sweet little slice-of-life manga about a woman in her 70s and a teenage bookstore clerk slowly forming an uncommon friendship over a shared love of manga about gay teen boys. The girl's general anxieties and shame about her reading interest contrasts nicely with the older woman's casual ease and openness to where life may take her.

I can increasingly identify with the scene where the woman reads the first couple volumes of a manga that only comes out every other year and then starts to show more calculate out how much longer she'll need to live in order to reach the projected final volume. show less
So lovely, so charming. I want to give this manga a hug.

The art here is not intricate or detailed, yet vibrant and expressive. There is a lot packed into this little volume.

Have you ever thought about how the elderly are often invisible to the society in general? People simply rush by… This is also about learning, discovering, and falling in love with new things when you are 75 (and why not?), and about unlikely friendships.

It was very satisfying to see the relationship between Ichinoi show more and Urara develop. I loved Ichinoi’s appetite for life, her resilience and kindness. Urara is so awesome and nice; I wish she knew that too. Being a nerdy and insecure teenager is tough.

There was a scene that I especially liked: Ichinoi finds out that she won’t be able to read volume 4 of the manga she just discovered… until “next winter”. (It was hilarious and I can relate.) Then she starts calculating – how many more years might she live, that is, how many volumes will she be able to read? Oh, Ichinoi… “That settles it. I’ll try to live to ninety.”

The next step is to ask Urara that fateful “what else can you recommend?” question.

Where is the next volume? I want to read it right now ;)
show less
Note: I've seen a few places online tag this as "boys' love." While it includes characters that read that genre, as well as a few panels and pages of the works they read, this is absolutely not a "boys' love" series, in case the cover doesn't make that clear.

Ichinoi is in her 70s and lives a quiet life. Her husband died a while ago and her daughter lives in another country, so most of the people she sees on a regular basis are the children and elderly people who come to her for calligraphy show more lessons. This changes when she goes to a bookstore for the first time in a while and buys a manga volume because it has beautiful artwork. She figures it will be like the manga she read when she was younger, but it turns out to be a romantic "boys' love" (BL, m/m) series. She ends up hooked and goes back to the bookstore for more volumes, attracting the attention of one of the store's employees, Urara, a high school student and huge BL fan.

Right Stuf has started including more reviews on their blog, and it was one of those reviews that prompted me to buy this. The artwork wasn't the style I'm normally attracted to, but the premise, a budding cross-generational friendship prompted by a shared love of BL manga, made me want to read it immediately.

This was a wonderful first volume. Urara desperately wanted friends with whom she could talk to about the things she loved, but she was too shy, and possibly too worried about how others would react to the things she wanted to gush about. Ichinoi was less shy, and she was the one to take the first steps in her and Urara's friendship, inviting Urara out for tea.

I loved how friendly, positive, and open-minded Ichinoi was. I also loved watching Urara try to navigate the potential hazards in this new friendship. When Ichinoi asked for manga recommendations, it was like the floodgates had opened up for Urara. She could think of lots of titles to recommend but was afraid of making a misstep and ruining things. Ichinoi had already defied Urara's expectations by enjoying a manga featuring a sweet gay romance, but would manga with on-page sex scandalize her?

This volume also touches a bit on Urara's school life - the one person her own age that she talks to is her childhood friend, a guy who's dating someone else and who I think she might have a bit of a crush on.

My biggest issue with this first volume was that it was very short. Also, it's setting off various alarm bells that make me wonder whether I should wait until a few more volumes have come out and I can hunt for spoilers before continuing on. Unlike A Man and His Cat, another series I recently started reading featuring an older protagonist, this one screams "will end with the death of the older character, after the younger character has learned to be more assertive." I like Ichinoi so far, and that would wreck me. I'm also not sure how I feel about the hints that Urara might have an unrequited crush on her childhood friend. It depends on how it gets handled, I suppose.

Extras:

A full-color illustration and a 2-page afterword manga featuring Ichinoi making and eating milk jelly.

(Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.)
show less
The concept of a schoolgirl and a senior citizen bonding over boys love manga is cute, but it is also a bit thin, so the author quickly introduces a bunch of new characters and inflates the role of the supporting cast to amp up the soap opera elements that will allow this to stretch out for three more volumes. So far, it's working well enough, but I'm worried they are watering down a story that might have been more effective at half the length.

Lists

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

丁雍 Translator
Jocelyne Allen Translator

Statistics

Works
11
Members
568
Popularity
#44,050
Rating
4.1
Reviews
12
ISBNs
46
Languages
7

Charts & Graphs