I think our son is gay 5
I Think Our Son is Gay Vol. 5 The Focus Shifts in the Final Volume of Okuras Heartwarming Manga Tale of Family and Acceptance
PRIDE MONTH ! If it’s Pride Month at Broken Frontier then it must be time for another review of Okura’s manga series I Think Our Son is Gay. We covered the first two volumes in June , the third and fourth entries in June , and here we are again with the fifth and final number for Pride Beginning as an endearing but formulaic collection of short strips, I Think Our Son is Gay has evolved in its five volumes as overarching story arcs and character development moved ever further to the frontline in place of its original, semi-punchline led set-up.
That original premise played with the idea that Tomoko, the mother of the book’s focus character Hiroki Aoyama, had come to suspect her schoolboy son was gay but not yet confident to approach out. Early strips used a gentle observational humour in an “is he or isn’t he?” series of shorts. Other cast members include Hiroki’s small brother Yuri, his well-intentioned but tactless father Akiyoshi, his female pal Asumi who has her control crush on Hiroki, and his best friend Daigo who we are led to believe is
I Think Our Son Is Gay 05
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I Think Our Son is Gay Volume 5 Review
The Aoyama family: doting mother Tomoko, exuberant high-schooler Hiroki and his quiet, self-contained younger brother Yuri are going back to organism a family of four again as absent father Akiyoshi (who’s been away on a work assignment abroad) is returning house for good. And Akiyoshi is one of those people who tends to speak his thoughts aloud without much regard of their impact on anyone else. Tomoko has suspected for a long while that their eldest Hiroki is gay but has been content to spot how things go, encouraging him with his steep school activities and his various enthusiasms. She’s watched over him as his best friend (and confidential crush) Daigo has got himself a girlfriend and he’s tried to cover his feelings by throwing himself into his university clubs (even though he’s never once openly admitted that he might own felt more than friendship for Daigo).
And then there’s Hiroki’s childhood friend Asumi (also in the choir) who’s liked him for a long time. When Asumi admits her feelings to Hiroki, he doesn’t know how to enable her down gently, yet still continue their friendship. The fact that he’s able to discuss this with Tomoko (in a detached ki
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