Hametsu no Koibito, Volume 1 (破滅の恋人)

October 15th, 2023

A girl with green hair tied in a braid looks off to the left, in front of a background of a hedge or wall covered in green leaves.We recently had the pleasure of three guest reviews for Plongée dans la nuit, the French edition of Yoru to Umi, by Goumoto. I had read the first volume in Japanese, myself, then forgotten in the crush of other series to continue. So when Hametsu no Koibito, Volume 1 (破滅の恋人) by Goumoto wandered across my feed, I thought I’d give it a chance. What I found is an intriguing story that is gripping and mysterious.

Arisu is a serious girl who finds herself wandering an apparently abandoned house where a friend has lost a teddy bear. The school kids use the grounds for tests of courage and other scary stories. Arisu finds the bear…but also finds that the house is not at all abandoned. A mysterious, attractive woman lives there. Arisu immediately thinks of her as a witch. A friendly witch to be sure, but Arisu, being a serious young lady, is not about to be bewitched with cookies and tea. She nonetheless keeps coming back and, while they never speak of anything important, finds that being around this older woman is changing her in ways she could not predict.

Like Arisu, it’s hard for readers to not marvel at the apparently carefree life of this woman, who is deeply alone, but not apparently lonely. When we do learn a bit about her, it’s to see her rage at a man who once was a boy she raged at when she was a young girl. Who she is and what she is doing remain mostly a mystery.

But Arisu, so serious, but brave, has become braver. She’s inspiring her timid classmate to come out of her shell, merely by being. And her piano teacher can sense a change in her playing…a maturity she has recently developed.

All of this is happens in a tone poem of a manga that has a frisson of “creepy” without a single actually creepy thing happening, and a feeling of anticipation that surely something must happen…and explosive moments of surprisingly small things actually happening. It’s an amazing pocket watch of a manga – teeny, tiny movemenst, intricately crafted and interlocked, causing each other to move and change. I’m definitely going to continue the series, if only to see if time simply progresses or the springs come unwound.

Despite the title, there’s no lovers, no Yuri, no relationships, but the “witch” definitely is the source of destruction, as well as it’s victim.

Ratings:

Art – 8 Sketchy and evocative
Story – 7 No idea what it’s doing, but I’m in
Characters – 8
Service –  0 No, but it always feels as if there might be next page
Yuri – 0

Overall – 8

This really taught story about an unlikely friendship makes for a surprisingly good manga.

One Response

  1. Patricia B. says:

    This sounds like an extremely intriguing manga! I hope it continues to be a compelling read and the buildup leads to something interesting.

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