More often than not, you’ll get lovely drawings like this by Yamaguchi.īut thankfully, none of that takes away from what is a very strong piece on adulthood. Like they’ll be a drawing where Miyu’s legs seems a bit out of proportion compared to the rest of her body, or we’ll get a cool scene where Miyu’s at her lowest point, and juxtaposed with Chobi’s reaction it works amazingly. In other words, it struggled a bit with finding a way to show what Miyu is doing. While the story is told from the cat’s perspective, it then doesn’t make sense to have pages involving her when the cat’s not around. It throws one hint later in the volume, but even then it’s still unclear. The biggest is it being vague about what Miyu actually does for a living. There are a few things with She and Her Cat that were an issue. Until she meets an abandoned cat on her way home. For Miyu however, the realities of this life slowly begin to catch up with her. We all experience it, from its highs to its lows. Vertical licensed it, and now we get to enjoy this work about adulthood. Then in 2016, it got a manga and an anime. Journey into the world of Makoto Shinkai’s She and Her Cat from the perspective of… the cat.ĭrawn by Tsubasa Yamaguchi, this manga’s origins started with a five-minute OVA.
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