Showing posts with label Warning! Whispers of Love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Warning! Whispers of Love. Show all posts

Saturday, 22 December 2012

Warning! Whispers of Love by Okuyama Puku

Rating: 5
Juné 2011 - Taiyo Tosho 2010
1 volume
Translation: Sachiko Sato

Warning! Whispers of Love is a collection of romantic comedy stories, where the emphasis is on the comedy over the romance. The title story takes up half the volume and a bunch of one-shots fill up the rest of the book. Okuyama has a cute lively style to her artwork and story telling, the stories are fairly amusing and I found all of them quite entertaining. However, I also found every story rather unsatisfying; there's a definite lack of depth to the characters and an unwillingness throughout the volume to shift gears into a more serious tone, with the result that this collection is never more than lightweight fluff.

The title story has a very simple premise that's wrung for all its comedic worth: a guy with a fetish for cleaning ears... Hajime is excited to start high school life but he immediately catches the eye of Nagura-senpai, the ear-cleaning obsessive who chases him around campus everyday with an ear-cleaner. It's funnier than it probably sounds. Although not laugh-out-loud funny, the characters are still cute enough and quirky enough to amuse. The story zips along easily and you look forward to the couple blundering towards a happy ending. Except that the story zips right through that happy ending as well. Not enough time is spent on those important romantic moments, as soon as the story gets a whiff of the mood turning the slightest bit serious it immediately skips back into lighthearted mode. There's not enough emotional substance to the story, which is a shame because otherwise the writing is quite solid.

My favourite story in the volume is a one-shot entitled 'My Room' about an introvert guy who meets a cheerful stranger one night who asks if he can crash at the introvert's place for two weeks. The story spends more time on the falling-in-love side of things and though it's only one chapter long, is consequently more satisfying than the main story.

Although this collection of stories was rather average, there's still a charm to Okuyama's work which would impel me to check out more of her stuff and hope to find better in another title, something I believe she is capable of.