Furou Kyoudai (“The Furou Siblings”) by Shiwasu Yuki

The story concentrates on the Furou siblings –  brother Daisuke and sister Kyouko. They refuse to leave each other’s side. Since kindergarden till high school they were always together. Before, as children, they were considered cute. Now they are plain weird in the eyes of their classmates as well as parents.

Blanc Marie by Yoshihara Yuki

What is one of the worst things that can happen to bride on her wedding day? Saying to bride to carry on with ceremony alone so that her “dear” unfaithful husband can be as irresponsible as ever. (they have already signed the marriage certification). What prevented her from divorcing him that very same day was her brother-in-law Soujirou acting as stand-in vowing:

I vow a thousand, a million times…. never to let you leave my side.

F no Meikyuu by Akira Hagio

“Even in a world full of noise, if you listen carefully, you´ll be able to hear your favorite music.”

(page 49, translated by Crimson Flower)

 

Remi lives with her older brother and distant relative Sora since childhood. Sora used to be unfriendly rebellious child who appeared to have an issue with trust.

Nil No Koi Mahoujin (“Nil’s Magic Circle of Love”) by Ikemi Runa

What attracted me to this manga were lovely coloured pages as well as genre that never fails to make me curious about its content.

As title suggests, this manga is romantic fantasy oneshot covering 40 pages.

Soko wa Chuumon no Ooi Ryouriten (“The Restaurant of Many Orders”) by Ando Yuki

You may not like me, but I love your food. (Delish Scans description)

 

I have just recently discovered how amazing story teller Ando Yuki is. Even though this manga is this short it has sufficient amount of pages to understand what’s going on.

Sora no Kakera (“Sky Shards”) by Fujimoto Yuuki

I have been a faithful reader of manga for years. As an immmature brat and novice in vast world of manga I started reading shoujo and I still stick to it till now. Though, to be honest, I occasionally betray this genre and wander in shounen or josei grounds hunting for something new, different, unique. As an impatient reader I hate long, draggy, seemingly never-ending series and rarely stick to it. But, of course, there are some exceptions. For this reason alone I LOVE oneshots or short series. But there is also another reason. Sometimes manga simply doesn’t need extension and serialization can unnecessary cause dropping of quality in plot, slow pace or bombing of clichés. So it’s not surprising my first review will be about 62-pages long oneshot.

Protagonists of this story are two ten years old boys, Nico and Jean. Both of them are orphans who grew up together in church.