It’s a conclusion that should satisfy almost everyone. And, of course, there’s still the amazing artwork as well. In the end even Misora is able to make peace with Tasuku after getting an apology, and then an apology for apologizing (which I really liked), and shows up at the wedding dressed to the nines. And of course it’s in Daichi and Saki’s wedding, as Saki is accidentally outed to her parents and they both have to deal with the fallout… which is not as bad as initially feared. It’s in the past, where we get Someone-san’s feelings of wanting to be alone and “unlabeled”. It’s in Tchaiko’s present, when he finds that the distance he’s been deliberately keeping between himself and his dying partner’s family doesn’t have to be that way. Adapted by Ysabet MacFarlane.Īfter three volumes that are brilliantly written but also somewhat fraught and filled with frustration, it was wonderful to see how this final volume of Our Dreams at Dusk has so much acceptance in it. Released in Japan by Shogakukan, serialized in the magazine Hibana.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |