My Idol Sits the Next Desk Over, Volume 2 Guest Review by Luce

April 6th, 2022

Please welcome back Luce, who will take a look at the remaining volumes of this series for us!

In the first volume, we saw Sakiko get over a good part of her shyness and awe of Chihiro, the girl sitting next to her that happens to be her favourite idol in a group called Spring Sunshine. She also manages to somewhat wrangle Maaya, a Spring Sunshine superfan, into their group, and there was a surprise concert – they all go, of course, but now Sakiko is awestruck by Chihiro again!

Volume 2 of My Idol Sits the Next Desk Over starts where we left off. Sakiko, having had Chihiro wave at her from on stage, is elated… But also awestruck? Having seen Chihiro as Chiro-chan the idol has made her nervous about the distance between them, although it seems somewhat evident to the audience that may only be half the problem.

Next, a sports festival, in which Sakiko tries to protect Chihiro’s identity from her photographer senpai so she doesn’t get outed as an idol. The three of them go on a ‘chic-nic’. Chihiro faces some criticism from classmates. And Sakiko and Maaya try to protect Chihiro from possible scandal in their own ways…that may not be very conducive. Finally, someone confesses to Chihiro! A lot happens in these chapters!

Now that Sakiko has come out of her shell a lot, the whole thing is a great deal better. That said, she has her hands full dealing with/mitigating the effects of Maaya. I think these two are intended to show two sides of fandom: the invested but respectful, and the obsessed and possessive. Due to Sakiko’s influence, Maaya never quite succeeds on her schemes, which largely involve singling Chihiro out and getting rid of any ‘interfering’ parties (in her opinion), but it is annoying. Her stalkerish tendencies will never become comfortable, and I hope she leaves them behind either by force or by choice. I feel a plot point in a future chapter may well be Chihiro linking Maaya and the forum aggressor as one and the same, and her reaction. But her view currently is clearly ‘Chihiro belongs to me’, and it is uncomfortable. Her actions towards Sakiko at times and some other characters are definitely not alright – if you can ignore them, the manga can be quite enjoyable. If it’s too close to home, maybe give it a skip. Vol 3 came out and by the end of that she’s not much better, Sakiko is just working more as a conscience engine for her. I await further developments.

Sakiko is another story. Being friends with Chihiro (and Maaya) has helped her immensely – we see her converse with other people in class quite freely by midway through, and it’s lovely to see her grow into herself. It seems fairly clear to us that she at the very least has a crush on Chihiro, and their growing closeness unsettles Maaya, who reacts in a… very Maaya way. It could be worse, and it’s resolved fairly quickly. One of her photography club senpais even thinks to herself about whether Sakiko is in love with Chiro-chan. So on the yuri front, I would say it is increasing. For her part, Chihiro seems to have had a bad experience in junior school, so her friends are very important to her, although she tends towards Sakiko – could we see something into this?

We get a few more characters in this book, which is nice. A thought I had is that’s its nice to have male characters who aren’t portrayed as creepy and aren’t just there for plot drama. We get some people who aren’t into idol groups, and announce their discovery of Chihiro as an idol in a slightly unfavourable way, which is greatly frustrating to the three of the main characters – but Chihiro deals with it in her own way, which was lovely to see. Especially with the other two seeming to think she needs to be protected – she is a bit clueless at times, so there is some reason – it was good to see her stand up for herself in her own way.

Story: 8
Art: 8, its bright and sunny, suits the story it’s telling.
Service: 1
Yuri: 5. Sakiko hasn’t made it there yet. Not sure if Maaya is in love or just obsession. Possibly both.
Overall: 9

The story is tending towards Spring Shine getting more popular, even if just within the class, but if they do, that could change things quite significantly. Maaya is uncomfortable at times, but over-ride-able in my opinion. I’ll be staying tuned – Volume 3 and and Volume 4 have come out as of 5th April!

4 Responses

  1. Mariko says:

    I know that ratings are the bane of every reviewer, but I’m curious about your approach. The review text seems in line with a “middle-of-the-road schoolgirl idol manga with a little yuri subtext and some problematic characters” summary. But the overall 9 grade suggests you liked it a LOT more than that, like “almost an all-time great” level. Is that reflective of your particular interests in the themes here, or is it really that good?

    FWIW when I do my ratings I try to take the Roger Ebert tack and rate based on “how well the thing does what it intends to do,” but since I’m usually reviewing things I liked it’s not hard to see how that can get muddy. :)

    • Maybe Luce will clarify her specific criteria, but I’ll just remind folks that ratings here on Okazu are as arbitrary as the reviewer wishes. The overall is not an average of the individual scores, but a “general effect” score on it’s own.

    • Luce says:

      Hi! I don’t put a ton of thought into the numbers, I will admit, because I’m pretty conscious that something I like might not appeal to someone else. I actually really enjoyed this manga, it engaged me, and while I’m aware that the stuff Maaya does is not okay, she is fictional and it doesn’t personally bother me too much – I mention it because some people will have a bad experience and it will bother them more. So I essentially have the ‘overall’ rating as ‘my enjoyment’, so it was a nine for me personally. Sorry if that’s a bit confusing!

      For me, it doesn’t ‘idolise’ Chihiro – Sakiko and Maaya do, but the manga itself presents her as an actual person, and it shows her to have struggles and doubts and feelings. I guess that’s why I enjoyed it, because it’s not glossing over stuff, but facing it more head on without being dark. I suppose I mean that I really enjoyed it, but I’m very aware other people might not. Hope that explains it a bit?

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