The culture festival begins with a bang - Kazuma's band Yin & Yang rocks the house, and the curtain finally opens on Aya's play But not everybody's mind is on songs and spotlights. Poor Tonami pines over the elusive Tsubaki, who is the kind of woman who loves to be free - even if that means being alone.
The Culture Festival is here and Aya's Steel Snow is underway. Although there is lots of humor in the series, this volume is mostly serious and even the play's story is pretty interesting. I've noticed how well Masami Tsuda expresses her characters through simple facial looks. Did anyone feel a little uneasy with Arima's look towards the end? It just makes me yearn that much more for volume 10. Also, Tonami makes a big decision despite the painful consequence it may hold for him. And Tsubasa is so *kawaii* as Antique! Fellow fans, the wait for each volume is so worth it.
Aya's play and the cultural festival!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
This installment of Kare Kano has some cute side stories, but the main focus is Aya's play, Steel Snow. All three of the actresses (including Yukino, Tsubasa, and Maho) perform to their best ability a play that hits close to home for Arima. I think Masami Tsuda did a marvelous job tranferring a play into a manga form. But the end of the book is the most important of all; it ends the "Yukino arc" as Tsuda puts it and starts the arc of Arima. A must read for all Kare Kano fans!
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