Thursday 19 September 2013

Blue Morning 2 by Hidaka Shoko

Rating: 6
Sublime 2013 - Tokuma Shoten 2009
5+ volumes
Translation: Jocelyne Allen

Volume 1 ended at an extremely unsatisfactory point with student Viscount Kuze Akihito forcing his butler Katsuragi Tomoyuki into a relationship in exchange for acceding to Katsuragi's mission of promoting Akihito through the ranks of society. Most of the volume had been spent on setting up the story, its characters and background, and when the romantic storyline made a first showing late in the volume, it did so rather abruptly and unpleasantly with an act of sex shadowed by violent overtones. I didn't think much of either character by the end of the book and hoped that volume two would change my mind. Which it has done. This volume has totally got me rooting for the couple and fearing for what can only be a future laced with tragedy for them.

The main problem with the first volume was that there was very little to like about Katsuragi. The story was mostly told from Akihito's point of view which established the character of Katsuragi as a cold, efficient, unflappable butler. This second volume is told mostly from Katsuragi's point of view and what a difference that makes because finally we get a character we can sympathise with. The reader is fed tidbits about Katsuragi's mysterious past through the course of the volume and confirms what was hinted at in the first volume, that Katsuragi is not a biological son of the Katsuragi family and was taken in by the former Viscount Kuze with a view to raising him as the Kuze successor, a plan that ended with the birth of an heir, Akihito. The story paints a picture of a young boy, rejected by what he thought was his birth family, given the chance to begin afresh with a new family only to be rejected again, in the end not belonging to either family and having no place in the world except for the job given him by the former Viscount. It's easier to understand Katsuragi's obsession with his task of raising Akihito, given the sad circumstances of his upbringing.

What really makes Katsuragi a likeable character, and not just a pitiable one, however, is the change in feelings he experiences, the thawing of his coldness. Akihito is relentless with his love, demanding that Katsuragi look at him as a person and not as the Viscount Kuze, and bit by bit, Katsuragi does start seeing Akihito for the person he is, for the man he is becoming, and as new feelings develop inside Katsuragi, he begins to stray from the single-mindedness of his mission. He's never known love of any kind in his life and he doesn't know how to deal with Akihito or his own emotions. As despicable as Akihito's behaviour is, his very forcefulness turns out to be his redeeming feature as nothing less will get through to the Katsuragi so entrenched in the belief that he must fulfil his duties to prove his worth.

This second volume is all about the romantic storyline and it's developing into a strong one; unfortunately, this happens at the expense of everything else. To put it bluntly, Hidaka just isn't very good at writing intrigue. The plot requires Katsuragi to be a manipulator but the bare bones scenes of him wheeling and dealing in business and society are not particularly interesting. There's a distinct weakness in the secondary characters. Their sole purpose is to provide information about Katsuragi and Akihito and there is not a single one that I find interesting in and of themselves. Anything of consequence that happens in the plot, and there is very little that does happen, only occurs in order to further the romantic storyline. The result is that whenever the story strays from the romantic thread, it becomes rather dull and has the feel of a mandatory scene required to move the plot along. However, Katsuragi and, to a lesser extent, Akihito are strong enough characters that they carry the story comfortably, enough so that the slower patches of the narrative can be endured for the sake of learning more about the pair.

On the romantic front, volume two has delivered and I look forward to seeing how this relationship unfolds. On the story front, I'm disappointed. The plot is thin and I see little hope of that improving. On the series as a whole so far, it's interesting but not exciting. I'll still continue reading but I doubt I'll be jumping on the fan bandwagon for this particular series.

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There are some issues with the translation which I've written about in a separate post: here.

2 comments:

  1. My volume is taking forever to arrive. Now it´s like I can´t wait to reed the volume and the review.

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    1. I was wondering why you weren't all over this review XD Hope your copy arrives soon then we can discuss!

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