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Tsubaki-chou Lonely Planet, Vol. 1

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Except one live with her sibling and another another live only with her dad for a little while until he shift his job

So given I just read Dengeki Daisy, which featured an age gap (see review for my hesitancy on age gap), I was pleasantly surprised about this one. I can't quite put my finger on it, but this storyline was a lot less contrived than Dengeki Daisy and it felt a bit more mature. The main charaters of both are strong girls who are orphans and without a family but they find (or are found by) people who become precious to them and they end up becoming families.I actually finished it 2 days ago. Yet, I am writing this review today because these 2 days I was just making up my mind and sorting out my feelings about it. This manga is like a hurricane of my literary life which has wreaked havoc in my thoughts. Literally. It was this good. These two series are ridiculously similar - high school girl lives with/generally spends a lot of time with an older (like 20 something) guy, and a kid/kids. There's definitely some romance going on between the two main characters, but the age gap leads them to be far to cautious about it. They're both super cute series, with super cute kids and super cute characters. EditSynopsis Due to her father's six million yen debt, sixteen-year-old high school student Fumi Oono and her father are evicted from their apartment. In need of a place to stay and a job to earn money, she starts to work as a live-in housekeeper for the young writer Akatsuki Kibikino. reason to read Manga online is the huge amount of material that is available. When you go to a comic store or Both of these have slow paced romances. Both main characters are strong, and though I don't think the girl in Skip Beat realizes it, wants some where to belong. They have different topics, but they give of some of the same feel. They both like an older man, and take forever to realize it.

For example, Tsubaki-chou Lonely Planet is a pretty popular one. Whatever, I'll give it a try. I mean, the problem with all these romance novels is that they give the same sort of vibes no matter which author you read about: girl main character gets swept up in a hot guy's pace somehow, thet somehow get into a special relationship in weird circumstances before it eventually sprouts into love. Am I missing something? Both "House of the Sun" and "Love So Life" revolve around a young female character who finds family in an unsuspected way. Both girls know struggle and lonliness and their make shift families rescue them. They both have sweet romances with a younger female and an older male and have a happy ending. Love so life is a little heavier than air koi in its seriousness, but they both go for happy fuzzy romance shoujo. (there should be a word for that)If you like romance, bishies with soft hearts, and light comedy, you'll enjoy either of these manga. Katsura is an acquaintance of Akatsuki Kibikino and she had a crush on Akatsuki for two years. She dislikes Fumi since their first meeting. She became close with Akatsuki after realizing he resembles a character from one of her favorite historical otome games. Manga those limitations don't exist. So if you want the best selection and you also want to save money then When they meet for the first time, the two start off on the wrong foot, with Akatsuki calling Fumi useless and treating her like a child. Determined to pay off her father's debt, Fumi works hard to prove him otherwise. However, despite Akatsuki's foul-mouthed and mysterious behavior, she begins to realize that he is not as despicable as she initially thought, gradually unravelling the passionate and caring person underneath.

cliches possible, apparently. I'm not going to lie, in the few chapters I read, there were some good points, like the art. While not groundbreaking, it's pretty good, clean, and clear-cut, and that's enough for something like a romance manga. Characters...are not that cliche, I guess, but the story is so cliche that I just couldn't go any further. Yen Press announced that they were licensing the series for English distribution, which began in 2022. The manga was serialized in the bi-weekly magazine Margaret, the chapters were later released in bound volumes by Shueisha under the Margaret Comics imprint.If you want to get the updates about latest chapters, lets create an account and add Tsubaki-chou Lonely Planet to your bookmark.

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