Well, wow. A whole lot of story happened in this volume. First, Saki finds Kanon’s former best friend – the one Kanon feel betrayed her – and learns the whole story. It was pretty heart-rending, with a strong element of children being forced to take on adult responsibilities without money, time or ability. Saki’s reaction may change a lot of things, because she sees both sides and really understands what happened in a way that Kanon could not. She then assures the other girl that she was really trying to be a good person – something she had never considered and with no one to tell her, she believed she was the bad guy.
Saki and Kanon’s days change rapidly as the school festival becomes the talk of the class. Kanon is encouraged to write a story for the upcoming short story contest and Saki is tasked with creating an arrangement of music for the chorus. The song she picks is surprisingly profound. But in doing so, the classmate she was paired with – who seems to carry some kind of grudge again Kanon – stops coming to school completely. I feel another systemic failure by adults coming on.
But last and not at all least, Kanon decides that she’d actually like to sing with her class, rather than just lip sync and enlists her mother to at least give a fair review. She’ll need work.
The story here is that both Saki and Kanon are allowing new things into their lives and they have each other to thank. Kanon, especially, is taking Saki’s advice and pulling down the walls around her, learning to take risks, and in doing so…has come to realize how important Saki is to her.
At this point, whether Saki and Kanon become a couple is entirely irrelevant to me. What I keep coming back for is a story of two girls forming a friendship that makes space for other people and new challenges and support for each other.
Ratings:
Art – 8
Story – 9
Characters – 9
Service – 0
Yuri – 4
Overall – 9
The first volume of The Moon On A Rainy Night will release in English on my and Guest Reviewer Matt’s birthday, so I am declaring it an official Okazu event! Grab your copy, read it and come by here on or around Sept. 5, when I do a review and drop your review of that fantastic first volume in the comments! Depending on how I feel, there may be prizes. I’m super excited than Kuzushiro-sensei is getting a print series here in English at last and I hope you’ll enjoy it as much as I do.