By Leroy Douresseaux
February 28, 2014 - 17:35
Nisekoi Volume 2 cover image is courtesy of barnesandnoble.com. |
Rated “T” for “Teen”
Raku Ichijo and Chitoge Kirisaki are in a sham relationship. Ichijo’s father leads the yakuza syndicate, Shuei-Gumi. Kirisaki was also born into a yakuza family, and her father leads the Beehive gang. To stop a gang war, their fathers force Ichijo and Kirisaki to date, although they cannot stand each other. In fact, Ichijo is searching for his childhood sweetheart. He wears a pendant lock around his neck as a memento of the promise he made to a mystery girl 10 years ago.
As Nisekoi: False Love, Vol. 2 (subtitled Zawsze in Love – Chapters 8 to 16) opens, Ichijo and Kirisaki continue to struggle through their false romance. His real love is Kosaki Onodera, and he is sure that she is the girl to whom he made a promise of marriage a decade earlier. Onodera’s best gal pal, Ruri Miyamoto, is determined to get Ichijo and Onodera together, and begins a series of schemes meant to do just that.
THE LOWDOWN: The Nisekoi: False Love manga is a yakuza comedy without explicit violence. After all, this shonen manga is a comic meant for teen readers, especially teen boys. There is plenty of slapstick violence – a comic punch, lighthearted gunplay, and threats against life and limb, but it is all meant to be funny.
Nisekoi: False Love Volume 2 surprised me as much as Vol. 1 did. I like this manga. The extents to which the leads must go to protect the truth about their false love consistently yield comedy go. I don’t know how long creator Naoshi Komi can do it, but, for now, Nisekoi: False Love is truly good.
POSSIBLE AUDIENCE: Readers looking for romance in a shonen vein will want to try Nisekoi: False Love.
Rating: A- /10