Ayxan Solongo reviewed Bloom into You, Vol. 5 by Nio Nakatani (Bloom Into You, #5)
Review of 'Bloom into You, Vol. 5' on 'Storygraph'
4 stars
Not much has happened either; it ended on the day of the festival though, so that'd be the main thing in volume 6, finally.
We did get some progress though: Yuu stood up to Touko and told her off, when Touko was hating herself again. I'm glad Yuu didn't let Touko take advantage of her and force herself on her, even if she doesn't mind it.
I also really liked the part with Akira and how Doujima defended her. Or generally how he got upset bc the guy lied about having a girlfriend.
It's nice to see that guys have morals too, considering they're always portrayed as players, who just want to have s3x or skinship. And that was pretty much his personality, more or less, up until now too, so I'm glad the author put in a bit more variety with the male characters.
The little side-story and perspective …
Not much has happened either; it ended on the day of the festival though, so that'd be the main thing in volume 6, finally.
We did get some progress though: Yuu stood up to Touko and told her off, when Touko was hating herself again. I'm glad Yuu didn't let Touko take advantage of her and force herself on her, even if she doesn't mind it.
I also really liked the part with Akira and how Doujima defended her. Or generally how he got upset bc the guy lied about having a girlfriend.
It's nice to see that guys have morals too, considering they're always portrayed as players, who just want to have s3x or skinship. And that was pretty much his personality, more or less, up until now too, so I'm glad the author put in a bit more variety with the male characters.
The little side-story and perspective from Koyomi was so nice and relatable. I love it when side-characters get random parts in a book and we get to see snippets of their private life, without the main characters being involved. She's quite passionate about becoming a writer, and even though I already saw that before this chapter, it's great to go more in-depth about it.
Koyomi is a super character, so I liked reading her perspective, especially because she's honest to herself. And as a writer myself, it was very relatable.