Rohan at the Louvre
I was all for the Jojo-goodness...and perhaps a talk mostly related to art, the Louvre, the darkest pigment known to Jojoworld... Let's just say the gore blindsided me and the overall story left me unsettled.
Ryuuou Heika no Gekirin-sama ~Hon Suki Nezumi Himedesuga, Naze ka Ryuuou no Saiai ni Narimashita~
Visually gorgeous...complete with that bishounen lead we all love. I do feel it could have been longer, seeing how the story seems to have been curtailed before it could be fully realized.
I will forever be curious what that damaged, antiquated book contained. Also...there is obviously something more to her being forbidden to go aboveground (other than the fact that it's supposedly dangerous).
Torso no Bokura
Anthology. The theme? Anthropomorphs. From birds, to fish to rocks. Sumiyoshi-sensei weave tales both splendid and haunting.
This Girl is a Little Wild
I was so inlove with the female lead, she was neither an obnoxious smartass nor irritatingly Mary Sue-ish. She was capable, strong and unabashedly herself. Her relationship with the ML was so darn pure I wanna cry. They're both cluelessly intimate with each other most of the time, their interactions never felt deliberate.
But now I'm crying for an entirely different reason and that's because this was dropped by the publisher a few years back. I still think about this every now and then.
Tenju no Kuni
A peek into the idyllic life of a 13-year-old herb nerd, doctor-in-training living in the mountains of Tibet. Winsome characters. Picturesque volume covers. Drama? Nonexistent. Read on.
Jingi no Mamoribito
Given the way the story was going, it desperately needed fleshing out. But then again, it just wasn't popular enough for the magazine so 10 chapters it is.
Dr. Stone 4D Science
A epilogue, of sorts, to Dr. Stone right after "Terraforming".
Hana-chan and the Shape of the World