Ida, after he thinks Aoki is in love with him due to all the confusion, doesn’t turn him down outright but instead says let’s be friends first and see what happens. My favorite part of the story, though, was Aoki and Ida both being open to liking another boy. Ida and Hashimoto were much more steady and less emotional with less over-the-top extreme reactions. Aruko did a great job of portraying the extreme emotions Aoki goes through even if there were a few scary panels that looked more like horror than romance/manga. My Love Mix-Up is the story of Aoki who has a crush on Hashimoto at the beginning of the book but by the end of the book has fallen for Ida, who he thinks Hashimoto likes only to find there’s another twist at the end! The whole story starts with a couple of comedic instances with who the eraser with someone’s name carved into it belongs to, whose name it is, and who likes who! And it just goes from there.Īoki’s character is a bit over the top, but I really enjoyed how he changed throughout the first volume from being in love with Hashimoto to questioning if he likes Ida to finally realizing and confessing to Hashimoto that he’s fallen for Ida. We’ll see if the next volume does (my library does have through volume 4!). It wasn’t an immediate OMG I must read these, but more of an aThankfully, it became available in between two books and I could do a slight schedule modification to squeeze it in and not miss any galley deadlines. I ended up with this one from the library after seeing My Love Mix-Up! (Vol.
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