276°
Posted 20 hours ago

Fujiyama san wa shishunki. 3.

£9.9£99Clearance
ZTS2023's avatar
Shared by
ZTS2023
Joined in 2023
82
63

About this deal

All three of these are highly recommended by myself. Do yourself a favour and find time to *binge* them.

Enjoyment - 8: Very wholesome. Don't do what I did and hold Kanba's perviness against him. It happens with young people. Characters: 7/10 - I enjoyed Fujiyama more than I did Kanba, especially in the beginning and mid sections of the manga. Kanba is pretty perverted and goes and starts this whole ordeal thinking with his libido, but it actually ends up well. Fujiyama is a pretty shy character who gets embarrassed easily but you can't blame her because she has always been teased her whole life about her height. I will say though, the way that the author wrote their characters ties in with the story really well, it made more sense of why the characters acted because they are in middle school. The way that they act fits really well with the age that they are supposed to be. So even if male MC isn't the best, he really fits in with his age group so kudos to the writer. The side characters were good and all but I couldn't tell you their names except vice-principle Also the Nurse is great for various reasons. Overall it's nice to look at. But their relationship is more like someone's delusions of what a relationship would be like and our MC has no interesting opinions of his own so that everyone can self insert, our love-interest has no personality so everyone can project one onto her. There's no conflict. There's no tension. There's no development. It's just nice and wholesome.a b "Ōya-san wa Shishunki 4-Panel Manga Has Anime in the Works". Anime News Network. 15 September 2015 . Retrieved 10 November 2015. a b Chapman, Paul (16 September 2015). " "Ōya-san wa Shishunki!" Manga To Receive Anime Adaptation". Crunchyroll . Retrieved 10 November 2015. Story - 7: No "real" story, just the relationship between middle schoolers, which is presented quite well. Some stories don't get this attention, however. I have seen some hidden gems out there that would probably get the same amount of appreciation on a larger scale, as the stories I have mentioned above. But considering that is not the case, they end up being on the quieter end of the scale with a few people who will praise this indefinitely. But the similarities are there. No matter how large or small something is, most simple things tend to get the better of us. For good reason and good intention too. The author creates beautiful genre scenes, brimming with life in its little details. The winter scenes in the house of Fujiyama’s grandmother stood out for me – it felt as if you could smell and touch the things in this warm older lady’s home, with its carefully kept old things in covers, neat mementos on shelves, stale candy and, of course, festive cooking. A year goes by, scenes change in small beautiful vignettes, mundane life distilled and turned by the author’s love and effort in eternal moments – a shrine in autumn covered in gingko leaves, a neingbourhood city’s summertime empty library, a schooltrip to Kyoto, city streets gone empty because of a typhoon. Usually it’s about Fujiyama, her family, while she herself is a quietly shining presence, and the main character, who we follow, enters her life and learns about her through this life, carried in by his love and sudden admiration and desire.

Before that, I must speak of the characters. The characters are the selling point of this story. I find no problem with them, and scratching down on the surface you begin to see some light on how simple "simple" is. The tl;dr of it is that these characters are legit people, legit humans probably on a relatability scale that hits closer than anything I have seen before. It's weird because what also makes these characters so good is that they undergo very implicit development, to the point where it flows with little notice. Their writing here was made in a way that makes it seem like nothing happens. Which is true. Not a lot of change happens. Nothing too drastic from what my memory serves. But that is what makes them so well, in real life, change happens over a long period of time. Average lifestyle, at least from what I know of Japan, doesn't consist of loud crashes and bangs like anime, specifically s.o.l romcoms, will tell you, people doing the stupidest of teenage things every moment, or some other nonsense that should only exist in a fictional atmosphere. Fujiyama and Kanba are perfect representations of this, they are the kind of people you could probably draw a parallel to someone you know, or have seen, in real life in a school environment. Whilst the two don't have anything of some really deep and intricate development, they are undoubtedly perfect in character representation. People in real life have a simple style of life; it is all the more enforced in this manga. Fujiyama is your athlete kinda girl, a little popular, outgoing-type and aggressive too. Kanba, the less popular childhood friend, is a little more lowkey, perverted, but still quite boyish to some extent. You can't tell me these people don't seem realistic. It isn't just that flat description I have just given, they also have their own motives and emotion to call their own using it to do stuff that may look like a universal action, but still gives them a sense of their solid character to claim as their own. We aren't so different from one another, but we still have something that makes you "you". I would never say that these characters do something for the sake of moving the plot forward either, none of this pointless drama or spontaneous burst random feelings. These characters are what they say they are and it is like that throughout the entire thing. You want some consistent characters? Here are some. The plot follows the slice of life staples, with status quo changing rarely, if at all, until near the very end. Some chapters may be a tiny bit strained, there’re some fluctuations in the mood (from a somewhat messy teen romance to a happy family-like romance), but overall the high quality of writing is maintained. Fujiyama's Adolescence, a somewhat hidden gem, is a part of that band of simplicity that we all love to take some time on.

Custom lists

What is stronger, slice of life or romance? Perhaps slice of life, though the two merge and suppost each other. The characters seem to be embraced by the immence world, they grow out of its soil and are carried by its currents. Yet their love colors and makes the world too in return.

Asda Great Deal

Free UK shipping. 15 day free returns.
Community Updates
*So you can easily identify outgoing links on our site, we've marked them with an "*" symbol. Links on our site are monetised, but this never affects which deals get posted. Find more info in our FAQs and About Us page.
New Comment