Reviews

Apr 4, 2010
Something about Suki immediately caught my interest during my CLAMP obsession phase...maybe because it was, and still is, completely different from any other CLAMP title I know of. Entirely devoid of any fantasy of magical elements and with a distinctly different style, CLAMP themselves hail Suki as a turning point in their story telling and art direction. While reading it you can observe the 'story within a story' technique later revisited in such favorites as 'Chobits'. However, after buying the complete set with much excitement, it was all downhill from there.

The thing is, Suki doesn't make much sense to me. I'll try to explain why.

Suki is the daughter of a very rich man living on her own. She is living by herself because after being kidnapped multiple times by people eager to get ransoms from her father, she decides it would be better to live by herself thus saving her dad the unnecessary stress of going through her multiple kidnappings.

I think I do not stand alone in saying...wtf.

We're talking about the rather brilliant creative minds behind Magic Knight Rayearth, X and CLover. Minds that blend fantasy and real life, humor and darkness, and they couldn't even come up with a mildly believable story that made one iota of sense? Really?

So anyway, let's go beyond the rather weak plot and into what really matters; the characters.

Suki...is my least favorite CLAMP heroine to date. She is incredibly ditzy and naive, upbeat and cheerful, without one inch of depth to her. She has the emotional complexity of a rock. Oh, but she gets top grades so she's smart. Derp. I am pretty tolerant of innocent girls exploring the world around them; I was totally captivated by Chi from Chobits. But Suki? After being terribly betrayed by a friend near the end of the series she tosses it over her shoulder like nothing, as if the friend had merely lost a pencil she'd lent her.

Now the teacher, Shiro, is equally bland, but on the more negative side of things. Humorless, grim and wrapped around his job, from the moment he steps onto the page you know that somehow the sugary sweetness of Suki will seep into his soul and softness him into uh...would you call it love? Like? The two really have no chemistry that I could pick up on and the whole 'forbidden love' idea between student and teacher was played down so much that you didn't really feel it. And the 'surprise' about Shiro? Not very surprising. You can probably already guess it from the review.

Besides those two, there really are no characters worth mentioning...besides for the erotica novelist, whose character and occupation I found quite interesting, both in the context of the story and as himself. Still, he was not a big enough part of the story to salvage it.

I wanted to like Suki...the idea of a girl with a rather sad background living alone in a house with nothing but her bears to keep her company, falling in love with her teacher, an older, stern sort of man...now that's a brilliant idea! In the hands of Kaori Yuki it would have been dark, haunted and tormenting...in the hands of CLAMP I expected sweetness, tenderness and an undertone of sadness. Like a Card Captor Sakura without fantasy. But Suki has none of Sakura's charm, probably because she has none of Sakura's strong points, her pride and bravery and strength. Suki is just a naive girl with nothing but cheerfulness to recommend her.

On the bright side, the art, though different from CLAMP's normal fare, is beautiful and expressive as always.

All in all, not recommended, except to CLAMP fans.
Reviewer’s Rating: 4
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