Payment Currency:
$ USD
A Brief Moment of Ichika
Synopsis
He was my reason for living- It's been three years since college student Ichika Sendawara was given two years to live, and she naturally feels like time is running out. But then, on the train, she happens to see her beloved teacher Professor Yurugi, who had vanished suddenly at the end of last semester. That one glimpse stokes the fire of a passion she had more or less given up on…but they may have more in common than she ever suspected. The economy in storytelling in this first of three volumes only serves to underline the poignancy of their connection-is a brief flash of happiness worth the pain of separation? - Life is fleeting, and love all the more so.
- Volumes
Review
|
Tyrraell
(All reviews)
19
people found this review helpful
|
Nothing in this life is perpetual, and not considering that and taking it into consideration is something we often don't do in our busy and hectic lives. The streets of the places we live in, the people walking on them, the buildings surrounding us, our families and relatives and the everyday interactions we have with them - in a sense, most of our days feels the same, and in this monotonous pace and routine, we often do lose the value of time, and it's implications.
But everything changes once you get a timer, and the deadline of your existence is something that read more
But everything changes once you get a timer, and the deadline of your existence is something that read more
|
bubblefish_
(All reviews)
1
people found this review helpful
|
Finished it about an hour ago. This is a very cute story, there were many times I would smile at the pages and even have audible reactions to what was happening. But, this is a very quiet story, there is nothing in this story that seems very out of the ordinary. At first, I wasn't too keen in that, and while I do still think it was a little boring at some parts, the softness grew on me. In the story, there's many references to doing the same thing over and over, for eternity. People want to hold on to things, it's an innate feeling
read more