Amayo no Tsuki, Volume 2 ( 雨夜の月)

May 5th, 2022

In Volume 1, we met Saki, a high school student who plays piano, and her classmate (and piano teacher’s daughter), Kanon, who is hard of hearing. Kanon is initially uninterested in becoming close to Saki, but as Saki conforms her behavior more to Kanon’s needs, she starts to warm up.

In Amayo no Tsuki, Volume 2 ( 雨夜の月), Kanon’s world grows wider. And I really want to make the point here – that *how* Kanon’s world changes is not because she grows used to the hearing world, but that the people around make sensible accommodation for her, which allows Kanon to interact on her own terms. It’s an important distinction and really makes this story not just another disability/inspiration tale, but a lesson for those of us who are hearing on how we can adapt to help HHD folks without burdening them with our needs. I recently saw an exchange on Twitter that went like this: Q: “What is ASL for helpful asshole?” A: “Hearing.” — this becomes a key point of Volume 2.

Kanon’s teacher, Miura-sensei, sees Kanon sleeping in class and invites her to a club room for her to eat lunch. He seems to really understand that her being in a room with a lot of people talking is stressful. While they chat, he pitches joining the literature club where, he assures her, they just really, honestly, read books. Kanon takes the plunge and finds one of Saki’s friends there, who welcomes her and does her best to make Kanon feel comfortable. When Kanon reports that she’s actually considering joining the club she’s clearly surprised at herself.

There is a little trouble brewing in this volume. Saki meets Kanon’s little sister Rinne. Rinne is carrying a lot of baggage – some of which she admits to, about being the abled sibling in the family, and over-protectiveness of her sister, but there’s also a lot of anger she’s not really honest about. Rinne tries to scare Saki off. Some of what she says was true, but there’s a lot of jealousy there, too.

Kanon tells Saki the story of her former school and the bullying and whisper campaign that went on. She refuses to let Saki return the key to the music room and even invites Saki to a movie…..where they meet their teacher and his daughter. They discuss subtitles and how it would be so much nicer if movies were subtitled. I agree with this so much. It’s one of the main selling points for streaming services for me.

As Kanon is becoming more comfortable with their skinship, Saki is becoming more aware of Rinne’s accusations, and her own feelings. I hoping that Volume 3 sees an honest talk about this.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 9
Characters – 8
Service – On principle only
Yuri – 3 Creeping up slowly

Overall – 9

Honestly, this is a fantastic manga. I’m going to write Kodansha and beg them to license it. Kuzushiro-sensei’s work has never been better, great characters, and a story that teaches the right lessons.

5 Responses

  1. I agree completely. And I, too, would love to go to theatres and watch movies that are subtitled, rather than use those “Closed Caption” devices that stuff into your drinkholder and can’t be twisted around to a position that makes them easy to read without bending your head. ;-) Subtitled movies, yes!

    I like its slow-burn development, in both Deaf-awareness and yuri fronts. It’d do well in an oversized hardcover format with added color pages; I’d pay a premium for such volumes, but I’d buy it (in print AND ebook formats both) any way I can get it.

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