Half and Half makes one fine read

There are many manga in the world, and there are many manga cliches. At first, a reader might think, “I don’t have time for double-takes.”

But Half and Half is here to dispute that. It will have you experience, with your body, the archetypical romantic plot!

What do you mean, no savefile?

Lesson one: Keep your mouth shut.

Smooth.

Lesson two: Disbelieve!

Captain Obvious

Lesson three: What is love?

Uncomfortable

Lesson four: Find perverted uses for your condition.

Yeah right.

Lesson five: Pull out the tricks!

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There’s something to be said about the conflation of emotional connectedness and shared physical sensation. Feeling the same things as someone else – both physical and emotional – is somehow profoundly intimate. Stripped down, this is the essence of the sex act.

The order of events is also very interesting here. Awkward meeting, being thrown together by circumstance, frivolous sexual taunting . . . and then serious conversation. It’s almost as if the preliminary sexualization of the relationship is a test, nothing more. Just a brief promise of things to come.

That, in a nutshell, is romance. Half and Half is forty pages, it’s decompressed in all the right places, and it tells the story of the love of one’s life. Is the simplicity of it a problem? No. It’s not some tortured story of wrongs and betrayals, and it doesn’t need to be. It just needs to be two people coming together, understanding one another, and coming to love one another.

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Author: moritheil

One might be forgiven for thinking that Moritheil is a postmodern literary critic who started reviewing video games in 2001, and spent the early 2000s learning at the right hand of con staff and fansubbers. However, those rumors are spurious: Moritheil is actually a distant relative of Genghis Khan who stands poised to conquer the world via the Internet. Follow along at http://twitter.com/moritheil.

6 thoughts on “Half and Half makes one fine read

  1. Cool stuff here. I may have to give this a read and see. 🙂

    Thanks for the review! ^_^

  2. Thanks for the comments!

    @Mike C – My pleasure.

    @Zeroblade – It’s definitely a bittersweet story.

    @Qwerty – Ah, the power of google!

    @Sumayyah – Hope you enjoy it. I’m not aware of any license agreement for it in the US yet.

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