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Suspenseful, fantastical read >>> by firesenshi (10.15.2001)
There is a lot of suspense while reading Ayashi no Ceres. The panels were actually edited very well such that when you turn each page, you'll never know what the next panel would contain, it might shock you. And I thought, after reading and seeing manga and anime bloodier than this, I will not be shocked anymore but I actually was. For one, I know this is shoujo manga I'm reading. Yes, it still deals a lot with love (albeit too much of "love" in there) but there is also subject of incest, murder, defamation of dead bodies. And like I said in my Ayashi no Ceres anime review, I think this one has more suspense and action than magic despite some aspects being the subject of legend.
Of course, as this is shoujo manga which deals greatly with relationships, Yuu Watase has covered that part very well. Thoroughly if I may add. There is too much Tooya-Aya here, it gets quite sickening. There are just too many panels of them hugging and kissing, the kanji "Ai" is wearing out. And frankly, I don't think that is love. From the first time they saw each other and gave each other hickies calling it a "mark of promise" is a presumption of love. The sexual tension between them is just too high, they can't keep their hands off each other. Of course, as this manga was made to target teenage girls, the illusion of "love" in this kind of romance would be heightened. Tooya, in his emotionless state where he doesn't have family nor memories and Aya in her innocence (aka naivete) will just well... calling to end up in bed one way or another at least.
But don't worry. This happened in Fushigi Yugi too when people got saturated with too much Miaka and Tamahome. There are other great characters to look forward to such as Yuuhi Aogiri, Chidori and Suzumi. The anti-hero Kagami is one character you better watch out for because he has great sinister tricks up his sleeve.
The art in the manga is very well done, as we can expect from Watase-san. How she merge the fantastical elements of legend along with science, plus the elements of love, sacrifice and revenge in subplots and stories makes this a page turner.
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