Doughnuts Under a Crescent Moon, Volume 2

October 1st, 2021

Doughnuts Under a Crescent Moon, Volume 2 continues to be one of my favorite Yuri manga series. It has almost everything I like in it, it’s thoughtfully fraught, fully adult, and packed with unpacking all the baggage we carry in an adult life. Most importantly, it contains powerful lessons for shedding that baggage and learning to relate to people as they, and we, are.

Here in Volume 2, Hinako is absolutely sure she has some kind of feeling when she’s with Asahi, but has no way to identify that feeling…because her entire life has been lying to herself about how she feels about things.

Asahi is on the cusp of letting go of the one thing she’s been clinging to instead of living her life and it terrifies her so much that she’s in almost complete denial.

These two are women like so many women I have met, who were trained to diminish themselves to the point of barely existing. Now that they are being given room to expand, they fear it. To Hinako’s credit, we can see that she’s pushing back a lifetime of normalization of a single, narrow path to happiness. One piece at a time, she’s throwing a stepping stone down, and tentatively letting her weight rest on it. It’s absolutely beautiful when she tells her woks friends for the first time what she’s thinking and they respond in pretty much the best possible way.

Asahi’s going to be a tougher nut to crack and it will take some external pressure that Hinako cannot provide. Two other characters will be the arms of that nutcracker, Asahi’s old friend Fuuka and, much more critically, her sister, Subaru. Subaru is a fantastic character…a very aware, very smart and very sensitive young woman, surrounded by what can only be seen as adults who are incapacitated emotionally. Subaru can see that Hinako is the fulcrum of the cracker and Asahi can only be squeezed just enough, before she shatters. Watch this space, is all I’ll say about that.

I love this story, I love the art, I love the characters and the writing ….and I love the care and attention Seven Seas is giving this story! Jenny McKeon’s translation is fantastic. There were a few turns of phrase that had me clapping my hands. Adaptation and editing kept it a tight and easy read. I continue to love the logo design by George Panella and lettering and retouch by Rina Mapa. This is the kind of book where all the details of localization fade into the back, but that’s exactly the point of good localization – it reads naturally, authentically. This team brings us another authentic manga reading experience.

This book is a guaranteed top 5 on my end of year lists and I hope Usui-sensei continues for many years. This is my moe – adults finding out who they are and what is important to them.

Ratings:

Art – 9
Story – 9
Characters – 9
Yuri – 6 and climbing slowly
Service – 0

Overall – 10

I want to thank Seven Seas especially this time for offering me a review copy because this book has been particularly difficult to get a copy of in print. It was never really available at any book store or online, and is now so unavailable, Amazon isn’t even really saying “unavailable”, it’s saying “Give it up kid, you might want to just get it on Kindle.” I expect you all have heard about the supply line issues publishers are having. Well, this is affecting pretty much everything, from manga to appliances to food to clothes. My HVAC guy says he can’t get parts for air conditioning repairs. If you’re in the US, it’s not going to get better any time soon, but do consider calling your state and federal representatives to ask them what they plan on doing about it. ^_^;

Doughnuts Under a Crescent Moon is an outstanding and beautiful adult Yuri drama. Get it today from Seven Seas!

7 Responses

  1. Fantastic review! This frames things in a way that gives me a real-world perspective I hadn’t thought of, which make me appreciate this story all the more, so thank you for that! You also do a great job of of describing what’s happening without telling (which I’m guessing may come naturally to you, but I still struggle with) Cheers!

  2. Ivan Van Laningham says:

    I’m lucky to be able to read your reviews. I adore this series (and agree very forcibly that Subaru is a delight and a treasure), but being able to point out and analyze why? Nope. Not me. Having good reviews like this reinforces my already high opinion of the series. I prefer reading on my kindle, so that part’s fine. I get a few in hardcopy, however, like Perfect World, Silent Voice, Aria, and was just thinking I should get Doughnuts in print as well. Guess I’ll keep on kindling. …

    • Thank you for the kind words. ^_^

      I get the books I want to keep in print (if they are available) but I like just being able to read them at all, honestly! I’m glad so much id on digital. I have a giant list of stuff to read that way.

  3. Chimera says:

    I bought this one on your recommendation and I loved the first volume – the second one should arrive the day after tomorrow. I usually don’t buy a series until it’s finished, but I thought it was ok to make one exception. I was actually hesitating between “Doughnuts…” and “Even Though We’re Adults”, and I think it was the art that tipped the scales. I wanted something about adults but with a little fluff too, so it’s just perfect. Also, Subaru has the potential to develop into my favorite side character ever. Anhyhow, thanks for your reviews.

  4. You’re welcome! I love both those series for pretty much the same reason – they are complex and adult.

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