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Paperback Hate to Love You Book

ISBN: 1934496014

ISBN13: 9781934496015

Hate to Love You

The Konoe and Kagetsu families have been fighting like cats and dogs for generations. Masaya Konoe and Yuma Kagetsu attend the same high school and are known to all as arch rivals, but do they really... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

To Love, or not to Love...

As we all know, this is a total yaoi Romeo and Juliet, minus death. However, I have to say that I absolutely love that aspect of the story. What is hotter than two men of rivaling families having deep-felt feelings for each other? An excellent story through-and-through, I would recommend this book to any looking for a great yaoi drama.

A Great Tale of Romeo and Romeo

I did like this story, though many themes are similar to other books. It had an actual storyline to keep me interested and enough intimate scenes. The issues that I have with the story is that Masaya was such a crybaby and Yuma was a jerk who couldn't keep his pants zipped. The translation went smoothly but I am uncertain if some of the names were Westernized. Sure Masaya, Yuma, and Akiko were childhood friends but would they call each other by their first names? I also didn't see the use of honorifics. It was published by Deux and the other manga that I read, I Shall Never Return, also didn't use honorifics. I would recommend getting this if you like Makeno Tateno. An aside here, most of her characters look the same as in some of her other manga so don't be surprised if you see some from her later work, Yellow.

Pretty Good!

Hate to Love You is Makoto Tateno's very first BL story. Tateno previously only wrote shojo manga (manga for girls), but her transition into boys' love (BL) territory is seamless. She is also, even in one of her older works (10 years old, in fact), a fantastic artist and just gazing upon her drawn characters is a pleasure. As mentioned already, this story is set up like a BL version of a "Romeo and Juliet" story, only without the tragedy at the end. Masaya Konoe and Yuma Kazuki are the eldest sons of rival real estate companies who just happened to grow up in neighboring estates, divided by a river so that they could never truly be together as friends (or otherwise). As rivals in high school their true feelings for one another become known and their "hatred" for each other ignites into an equal amount of passion. It is relatively cute and no one really gets hurt, except for the one time Akiko, the daughter of another rival real estate company and neighboring estate that Yuma and Masaya are "fighting over," slaps Yuma (one of my favorite moments in the book). It seems clear that the story was originally designed to be a one-shot (one short story) and it stands alone just fine, but either its popularity spurned on more chapters, or Tateno just couldn't leave the characters alone after that one taste of them and enough was eventually written to fill most of an entire volume (plus an unrelated side-story). In any event, the second and third chapters of the main story in the book are a testament to Tateno's thoroughness in writing character background, motivation and plot resolution. This one book satisfies just about every question or desire you might have concerning these characters (or at least did for me). If you're looking for graphic bits, Tateno seems to have always been reserved, starting all the way back with this, her first BL title. Yes, there are love scenes and yes they are well drawn and appropriate, but they are not excessively erotic or graphic. I personally love her style and if you have read any of her other BL works this book is on par with them in that department. My actual favorite part in the book is the postscript. I may be biased because Tateno is one of my favorite mangaka (artists of manga), but I absolutely love her postscripts because she is incredibly candid, humorous and often surprisingly informative. In the postscript for this particular manga volume she discusses an incident she had with her editor concerning a specific panel on a page in the main story. Her editor told her that women in BL manga are extranneous and her choice to show a close-up of Akiko was unnecessary and asked a horrified Tateno to make her drawing of the woman smaller. It's interesting because we get an insight into the mindset of the industry and the ways in which it treats female characters, something Tateno has strived against in many of her BL works. Women are normally demonized or marginalized or under-developed, but, in

A Tale of Love and Rivalry "Romeo and Juliet" Style...only Yaoi ^_^

As the title entails, "Hate to Love You," is a story of love and rivalry between the two protagonists. However, rather than the same cliche Romeo and Juliet-type storylines that make up the majority of romance material today, it was nice to see the story portrayed with a "twist." "Romeo and Romeo" that is. All the juicy parts that make "Romeo and Juliet" so famous--minus the tragic ending--are still intact. The excitement of a forbidden romance, the adrenaline pumping rivalry between the two protagonists and their families, and the external and psychological turmoil of the characters as they battle through their rivalry with, and feelings for, each other. I am a sucker for anything forbidden that results in lots of psychological turmoil within the characters so I rather enjoyed this story even though it was set in a stereotypical plot setting. Not to mention, I am also a sucker for sappy romance stories as well ^_^ Makoto Tateno really knows how to portray serious and intense emotional states like rivalry, love/hate, and obsession in very engaging storylines. The second story (there are two stories to this oneshot volume) deals with one of my favorite topics: love that borders on obsession / or in this case, more of a fascination/ attraction that leads to obsession. Though the physical elements are not as intense in this novel, the examination of deep emotional/psychological states within the characters more than makes up for it. At least with these two stories, it is not all about the sex. There is a depth to the stories that, if examined deep enough, could be quite disturbing. Then again, that may be just my tendency to overthink everything.

Appealing star crossed lovers!

This is Romeo and Juliet but Yaoi and minus the tragedy. The romance is engaging and I like the flashbacks to the star crossed lovers' childhood. Yuma is the cool, smart and aggressive seme while Masaya is the earnest, pure and gullible uke. They are stereotypes but this is why we read Yaoi. I find both characters very appealing as their relationship evolve from rivalry to love, interspersed with misunderstandings and doubts. I would have preferred a more dramatic ending and the sex could be more explicit. This is the mangaka's first attempt at Yaoi and she is of course the mangaka of my favorite series Yellow. There is also a second separate short story on obsession. This one is disturbing even without any explicit sex. Her artwork is clean lined and pretty, with such vivid facial expressions. Please to add this to my collection.
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