This series is so freaking cute! Itsuomi is the epitome of a green flag when it comes to words of affirmation and reassurance. He is a busy man, but always makes time for Yuki and I love that about him!
I will admit this volume made me feel bad for Oushi though. I’m a sucker for friends-to-lovers, so I feel bad for this man!!
For some reason this one took me awhile to get through. It was very long!
But it was very good! A beautiful graphic memoir about going to Mexico to bring Abuelito to their home in the US. It had a mixture of childhood wonder and excitement mixed with somber and stress.
I loved the conversation of feeling in the middle. Being both Mexican and American and not quite feeling fully a part of either, but simultaneously feeling like both are a part of you. I thought Pedro finding his grito expressed this sentiment beautifully.
A solid 3 star read! This is a good introductory read into how deeply embedded into patriarchy our world is, but the way its organized is rather overwhelming.
When the book focuses on one woman and tells their story and history, it’s really educational and awe-inspiring! But most times it just rapid fire names a bunch of women and the men who suppressed them without ever diving deep into the history.
There was also a random history spotlight on a man that felt very out of place. Like I expected him to end up supporting women’s rights or something since they focused so much on him, but I don’t think he did? I don’t know, it was an odd choice.
Overall it was an enjoyable read, but it could have been even more inclusive and even more modern.
**I also want to state this is a translated work and was originally published in Norwegian, so a translator bias and loss of original meaning may take place.
I am really enjoying this series! But this book suffered heavy from middle book syndrome. The backstory could have been a book all on its own because there was so much of it! Parts of the backstory were very interesting, but some were unsettling and I am pretending doesn’t exist.
This one also seemed to not flow as well as the other two books. The others had so many plot-lines, but they’d all come together in the end and tie everything together. This one didn’t really do that. Every plot-line was its own thing and none of them were really resolved.
Either way, I need more Hua Cheng and Xie Lian interactions in future books. They make this series and are such a joy to read about!