Author picture

Takarai Rihito

Author of Ten Count, Volume 1

34 Works 2,541 Members 45 Reviews 3 Favorited

About the Author

Series

Works by Takarai Rihito

Ten Count, Volume 1 (2014) 430 copies, 11 reviews
Ten Count, Volume 2 (2014) 327 copies, 10 reviews
Ten Count, Volume 3 (2015) 284 copies, 6 reviews
Ten Count, Volume 4 (2015) 242 copies, 2 reviews
Ten Count, Volume 5 (2016) 238 copies, 5 reviews
Ten Count, Volume 6 (2018) 191 copies, 2 reviews
Seven Days: Monday → Thursday (2007) — Illustrator — 140 copies, 2 reviews
Only the Flower Knows, Volume 1 (2010) 130 copies, 1 review
Seven Days: Friday → Sunday (2009) — Illustrator — 103 copies, 2 reviews
Graineliers, Volume 1 (2014) 80 copies, 1 review
Only the Flower Knows, Volume 3 (2012) 67 copies, 1 review
Graineliers, Vol. 2 (2016) 58 copies, 2 reviews
Graineliers, Vol. 3 (2018) 44 copies
At The Flower Capital (2013) 31 copies

Tagged

2014 (14) 2017 (35) adult (25) BL (142) boys' love (52) by_manga (12) cartaceo (22) drama (69) fantasy (15) favorites (13) fiction (44) LGBT (19) LGBTQ (23) LGBTQ+ (13) manga (374) manga-manhwa (20) mature (14) paperback (13) psychological (25) queer (23) read (28) Rihito Takarai (23) romance (79) shounen-ai (23) slice of life (22) sublime (34) Ten Count (18) to-read (58) Tokyopop (16) yaoi (183)

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Takarai Rihito
Legal name
宝井理人
Other names
Giga Traper
Birthdate
1989-10-17
Gender
female
Nationality
Japan
Place of death
Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan
Associated Place (for map)
Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan

Members

Reviews

54 reviews
An interesting seduction as one man's dominance pushes past the other's OCD and unexplored thoughts about his sexuality.
Finished the series in a sort of slow rush -- pausing to catch my breath, but eager to see what came next.

I've read some reviews of this work. There's a lot into it, a lot more than might be thought possible in a manga, especially one with as much graphic erotic content as this one. The erotic content is important, though, because it is a direct path into the main character's psyche. The damage he took has to do with sex and his subconscious motives to cut himself off from touch of pretty show more much any kind -- physical or emotional.

The story is also about relationship power dynamics, with a subtle but not coded BDSM theme. No whips and chains, no leather and ropes, but power and control, and choices. Choices are a big part. There's also a lot of love, affection, and attempts to help. There are morals guiding it, even if they require some thinking and deep consideration to fully unravel.

To some, the relationship between the main characters appears unhealthy, full of gaslighting and cruel teasing, but to me, I see it as the chosen and desired dynamic, even if it isn't personally attractive as a relationship choice. The main characters are tormenting themselves as much -- or more -- than each other, and they also make choices to ease that torment and head for happiness. It's not a road a lot of people might travel, but it is a road.

The manga will stand up to rereading, I think.
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There is something about this manga...
While I had been aware of "yaoi" for some time, the examples I had been exposed to never really made me want to explore the genre or seek out more. The highly stylized art, the gender roles the characters were forced into, the stereotype of the culture of yaoi fangirls... none of it appealed to me. But I happen to like romance stories, and I really like reading romance stories that feature queer characters. So, somehow, Seven Days came across my radar in show more early 2010, as I was exploring different manga types, and when I saw that the art style was very decidedly not what I expected from yaoi, I was intrigued and downloaded a chapter of the fan-translation.

I dislike the term "yaoi", because it feels to me that it implies sex scenes and certain roles for the characters. BL ("boys' love") is my preferred term, which I started to use after reading Seven Days. At least this first volume of the two-volume series doesn't contain any sex, and the characters' relationship doesn't feel like it's being forced into specific roles of "this person is the 'man' and this one is the 'woman' and one is weepy and the other is cold", which is what I had previously found to be prevalent in the genre.

The story is about two high school boys: one is a third-year (senior), the other a first-year. It's a romance, so their romantic relationship is, of course, at the center of the plot. Shino, the elder of the two, never gets on well with the girls he dates (apparently, his appearance is deceiving), and he doesn't really understand the whole "love" thing. The younger, Seryou, serially dates girls for one week each - the girl of the week is the first one to approach him on Monday and ask. At the end of the week, if he hasn't fallen in love, then he breaks it off. The boys' relationship begins when they happen to meet up with each other on a Monday morning and Shino suggests, not entirely serious or sure why he's suggesting it, that Seryou go out with him for the week. Things go from there as can perhaps be expected by the genre.

The first volume in the story covers Monday through Thursday in the week that the boys date (thus, the "Seven Days" title). It ends on a bit of a cliffhanger, but in a romance manga, the question is usually how the cliffhanger will be resolved to provide the happily ever after, not whether there will be a happily ever after. Yet, when I read this volume for the first time, I felt genuine worry that the HEA wouldn't actually occur. The pacing of the story, the expressiveness of the art, it all pulled me in. Many romance novels, I can only read once, but this one, I've read several times.

The book isn't perfect. The illustration style, while being different from what I expected of BL, and while it is expressive and lovely, has some weirdness to it, and some of the panels are too strongly "pretty person to be admired" (something that I dislike in manga). Other than the primary couple, the characters are fairly flat (but this isn't uncommon in romances), and I can see how Shino and Seryou themselves might be called bland or 2-dimensional, though obviously I think they manage to avoid that. There's also a number of BL clichés which have tried to work their way into the story, such as the shrill/harpy girl who interferes, or the aforementioned panels of pretty people to be admired, but for the most part, I don't mind them here. As a whole, I found this book to be compelling and I keep returning to it.
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½
I have an anxiety and depression disorder, not germaphobia, but I understand panic attacks. The protagonist is also subject to them. This story triggered me so that I had to take several pauses in reading it, but it is so compelling that after I calmed myself, I had to keep reading. That's my best recommendation.

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Statistics

Works
34
Members
2,541
Popularity
#10,105
Rating
3.9
Reviews
45
ISBNs
100
Languages
7
Favorited
3

Charts & Graphs