Love*Com Volume 16

By Aya Nakahara. Released in Japan by Shueisha, serialized in the magazine Bessatsu Margaret (“Betsuma”). Released in North America by Viz.

Everyone knows the tragedy of a great series with low sales cut off in its prime. You see it a lot here in the US, with superhero comics. And it’s all over Japan, with Weekly Shonen Jump being particularly unforgiving of its newbies. But Japan also has the opposite problem, which is when a series gets popular, and you get an anime or a live-action movie, so the artist has to continue it. Unfortunately, it’s almsot done. So what happens? Plot complications, waffling, brief breakups, focusing on side characters…

It’s sad when a series you really enjoyed hits this wall, but that’s what’s happened with me and Lovely Complex, aka Love*Com. The early volumes had both fantastic comedy (the facial expressions in particular were a thing of beauty) and some sweet romantic angst. I read each volume religiously, and couldn’t wait for Koizumi and Otani to hook up.

And then they did. Woo hoo! And… wait, there’s 9 more volumes to go? Uh-oh. Even this volume, the second to last, has issues. It’s actually the last volume of the main series proper, but there’s another one due out in 2 months, which will have a bunch of ‘side stories’.

What’s worse, they couldn’t even fill this volume! Sometimes in early volumes of manga, you see ‘one-shots’ that have nothing to do with the main story, inserted into the manga by the author to fill space and to get her old work in a book. Which is fine. But you rarely see it later on, after a book has become popular. This volume has a 40-page ‘dramatization’ of the lead actor from the live-action Love*Com film, and it’s OK, I guess, but it’s so hyper-realistic that it’s totally out of sync with the rest of the series.

As for the main series, we have one more side-character to get paired off, as the artist seems to be falling into the ‘must pair all the spares’ habit that shoujo does a lot. (Marmalade Boy made fun of this, noting that it deliberately left two guys un-hooked up in its manga.) So we meet a new girl, and she’s not what she seems, and she has a crush on Kohori, so they try to help her out. And it turns out that when she comes out of her shell, she’s awesome! If this sounds cliched, yeah.

To be fair, if you don’t like cliches, don’t read any shoujo manga at all. And I did like the student film they put together, where Otani finally (if indirectly) says that he loves Koizumi. It was very sweet, and her reaction was wonderful. And the play Otani-Boshi was hysterical, especially Koizumi’s improvised ending. Nice to see one great blast of the comedy this series was known for.

But overall, I can’t help but think this is a classic example of a 17-volume series that should have been 8 or 9. It’s staggered to an ending, but I’ll probably be re-reading the earlier volumes more.

2 thoughts on “Love*Com Volume 16

  1. Charlie

    I agree that Lovely Complex, as much as I enjoy it, has been running on fumes for a few volumes now – it's about a third too long :( – I'm getting the same vibes from Yakitate Japan, and there's six volumes left of that!But I have loved reading it.

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  2. Michelle Smith

    I agree, too. I really liked this series when it was all about the anguish of being in love with a friend who couldn't see you as a girl, but once the focus shifted onto the friends and their previously unmentioned grandmas and crap like that it went rapidly downhill.

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