Anata to Watashi no Shuuhassuu (あなたと私の周波数)

August 20th, 2020

Readers of Comic Yuri Hime monthly, might remember most of the stories in this volume, Anata to Watashi no Shuuhassuu (あなたと私の周波数) by Kuwabara Tamostsu. Each short takes a look at a frustration in life and finds a unique way of addressing it.

In the titular short, a woman who is unsatisfied with her life and her job, admires a colleague’s positive outlook. When she finds an old walkie-talkie in a storeroom, she’s shocked to hear that colleague engaged in a rant on the bandwdth. Unaware that her colleague is listening, Arata-san keeps her cool by letting off steam into this partnerless – she thinks – walkie-talkie.

A woman asks her ex-lover to help bury the corpse of her former life.

A track star finds her love of running renewed when a transfer student is so effortlessly better than she is.

A young woman find love, lunch and family at the same shop, when her lately deceased father turns out to have an another family she had no idea about.

Going out drinking and sharing confidences with your peers is all fun and games until one of turns out to be in love with you, too.

I genuinely enjoyed Kuwabara’s art. The characters feel mostly real emotionally, as well.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – Variable, averaging 8
Characters – Same
Yuri – 6 The stories are less about relationships than communication
Service – 1 on principle

Overall – 8

Overall, a satisfying collection of one-shots. I’ll hope to read more by this artist.

2 Responses

  1. Patricia B says:

    One thing I really like about the recent rise in yuri stories with adult protagonists is that we are getting more stories (be they one-shots or ongoing series) that address specific issues that one only really encounters in adulthood. Don’t get me wrong, I’m loving that there are more children’s and teen’s media that showcases the experiences of LGBTQ+ youth, but knowing these adult focused stories feel very validating as a bisexual woman in her late-twenties. Hopefully this manga gets picked up for an English license sooner than later, because it sounds really interesting.

    • Super says:

      I completely agree. There may be some significant reason for this, but I’m a little upset that so many good titles with adult characters (both queer and straight) remain unknown to a relatively wide audience. It would be great if more works like My brother’s husband got anime or at least licensed in my country.

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