A Tropical Fish Yearns for Snow: Volume 1 manga review
By Leroy Douresseaux
November 17, 2019 - 19:15
Viz Media
Writer(s): Makoto Hagino, John Werry
Artist(s): Makoto Hagino
Letterer(s): Eva Grandt
ISBN: 978-1-9747-1043-0
$9.99 U.S., $12.99 CAN, £6.99 UK, 172pp, B&W, paperback
Rating: T (Teen)
Rated “T” for “Teen”
A Tropical Fish Yearns for Snow is a manga from Makoto Hagino. VIZ Media is publishing an English language edition of A Tropical Fish Yearns for Snow as a graphic novel series.
A Tropical Fish Yearns for Snow, Vol. 1 (Chapters 1 to 4) introduces high school student, Konatsu Amano. When her father gets a job overseas, Konatsu has to leave Tokyo and the life she’s always known. She relocates to a small seaside town to stay with her aunt.
The move also means starting at a new school surrounded by complete strangers, and that is a lot to handle for a girl who has trouble with change. On her first trip to Nanahama High School, Konatsu arrives at the open house for the school's “Aquarium Club,” There, she meets Koyuki Honami, an older girl who is the sole member of the Aquarium Club. Konatsu has introverted tendencies that are hard for her to overcome, but she finds herself drawn to Koyuki. Maybe, she has found something and someone worth coming out of her shell for?
[This volume includes an “Afterword.”]
THE LOWDOWN: The A Tropical Fish Yearns for Snow manga seems to be the latest LGBTQ-themed manga from VIZ Media. That it arrives shortly after the conclusion of VIZ's release of That Blue Sky Feeling, a manga about a teen boy who has a very close relationship with a gay teen boy, does not feel like a coincidence.
A Tropical Fish Yearns for Snow Graphic Novel Volume 1 introduces two high school girls who are obviously drawn to one another. They may even be smitten with one another. Creator Makoto Hagino has an anime-inspired drawing style that features girls with big, emotive eyes, which conveys the narrative's highly emotional tone.
John Werry's translation and English adaptation is gentle and sweet, and the best thing about it is that it captures both the awkwardness of the girls and their desire to be connected with one another. Eva Grandt's lettering presents sound effects as melodic tones that indicate important moments in the development of Konatsu and Koyuki's relationship.
There is something about A Tropical Fish Yearns for Snow that firmly holds my attention. It is as if I have to follow whatever romance may or may not be happening.
I READS YOU RECOMMENDS: Fans of the boy-centric That Blue Sky Feeling will want to try the girl-focused A Tropical Fish Yearns for Snow.
A-
7.5 out of 10
A Tropical Fish Yearns for Snow, Vol. 1 (Chapters 1 to 4) introduces high school student, Konatsu Amano. When her father gets a job overseas, Konatsu has to leave Tokyo and the life she’s always known. She relocates to a small seaside town to stay with her aunt.
The move also means starting at a new school surrounded by complete strangers, and that is a lot to handle for a girl who has trouble with change. On her first trip to Nanahama High School, Konatsu arrives at the open house for the school's “Aquarium Club,” There, she meets Koyuki Honami, an older girl who is the sole member of the Aquarium Club. Konatsu has introverted tendencies that are hard for her to overcome, but she finds herself drawn to Koyuki. Maybe, she has found something and someone worth coming out of her shell for?
[This volume includes an “Afterword.”]
THE LOWDOWN: The A Tropical Fish Yearns for Snow manga seems to be the latest LGBTQ-themed manga from VIZ Media. That it arrives shortly after the conclusion of VIZ's release of That Blue Sky Feeling, a manga about a teen boy who has a very close relationship with a gay teen boy, does not feel like a coincidence.
A Tropical Fish Yearns for Snow Graphic Novel Volume 1 introduces two high school girls who are obviously drawn to one another. They may even be smitten with one another. Creator Makoto Hagino has an anime-inspired drawing style that features girls with big, emotive eyes, which conveys the narrative's highly emotional tone.
John Werry's translation and English adaptation is gentle and sweet, and the best thing about it is that it captures both the awkwardness of the girls and their desire to be connected with one another. Eva Grandt's lettering presents sound effects as melodic tones that indicate important moments in the development of Konatsu and Koyuki's relationship.
There is something about A Tropical Fish Yearns for Snow that firmly holds my attention. It is as if I have to follow whatever romance may or may not be happening.
I READS YOU RECOMMENDS: Fans of the boy-centric That Blue Sky Feeling will want to try the girl-focused A Tropical Fish Yearns for Snow.
A-
7.5 out of 10
Rating: 7.5/10
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A Tropical Fish Yearns for Snow: Volume 2 manga review
A Tropical Fish Yearns for Snow: Volume 1 manga review