Forget manga
Gallery
Verdict: Forget Me Not That probably fills my bad-pun quota for the next few months or so, right? Still, after you’ve seen Tsuruta Kenji’s distinctive art style, you don’t forget it. This manga is worth checking out at least for looking through the pretty pictures and properly proportioned humans as opposed to the usual anime fare. And on that note, look forward to more stuff from this mangaka on RMT in the future whenever I get tired of crappy harem manga!
For some reason, I suddenly decided that I wanted to read manga that had food as a strong theme. I’m not sure why, I was just in that sort of mood. So I went through AniList and looked up manga that had Fodd as a tag and for the most part, I was rewarded. It’s how I discovered , and all of which I really like so far. And it’s also how I found A Meal Makes Her Forget.
And even just in the first few chapters, there is a lot of hope in this manga. In a lot of societies being single past thirty is considered a bad thing for a woman. And being left at the alter is possibly the most shameful event a woman could endure. But a Meal Makes her Forget actually frames it as a chance for Sashiko to really find herself and figure out what she wants out of life. That’s really cool.
Boukyaku no Sachiko (A Meal Makes Her Forget) – Manga First Impression
Whereas so many romance manga are all about nascent relationships, Forget Me Not takes a more mature and considerably more tragic approach. Serizawa, for one, isn’t a lovestruck schoolboy—he’s an adult with years of experience breaking hearts and having his own broken, and filled with guilt about the harm he has done to others. Forget Me Not is about ruminating on old relationships, not forming new ones.





























