Monday, March 1, 2021

午後の少女にお茶の時間を by 麻衣子

 If you take a look at past reviews on this blog, you might notice that we're not new to dōjinshi with tie-ins to businesses or locations - I reviewed one that featured local business ads just a few weeks ago, and even earlier I reviewed a few of the manga and dōjinshi famous Tokyo maid coffeeshot Schatzkiste has put out. So, this week we're totally in our ballpark, as we review another dōjin offering that takes its inspiration from a Tokyo coffee shop...



Nested in the hustle of central Tokyo is R-za Dokushokan, a tiny coffee shop that, charming decor aside, has one peculiar trait: while on its premises you're not allowed to talk, and even orders have to be placed in a hush. Wonderful place, and I regret it wasn't already on my radar when I was over in Japan. Just look at their site's pictures... the ambience looks magic, and place in a metropolis where you can't blabber? fantastic. 



And a magical place is, of course, the perfect setting for a magical tale, or even two. 午後の少女にお茶の時間を is a short but sweet b&w manga that takes place within the walls of Dokushokan, where one can go to give their overworked tongue a rest, as well as encounter a certain barista who has the power to take one into their own inner world. A lost girl and a pair of sisters take advantage of this magic and take a new perspective on life, all the while enjoying a nice hot coffee... or some edible ivy. 



The stories are short and sweet, dialogue is sparse (as appropriate) and the style is super-simple, reminescent of shōjo manga from times past. The dōjinshi's author is not the bar's owner, who apparently mostly gave the story input, but amateur mangaka and doll lover 麻衣子of circle "Syoujyo Gahou"... who, unfortunately, recently seems somewhat inactive on the illustration side. Aside from the two short stories, the dōjinshi closes with a short feature on the coffee shop (with few B&W pics, unfortunately) and includes an extra brochure with a interview with the coffee shop owner and the author, in a pseudo-handwriting that I found all but impossible to decipher. Shame.



Overall, a nice and short offering that, once again, shows how dōjinshi do not need be about lustful teachers and Evangelion inflation fetishes. And the coffee shop goes right to the list of places to visit when I make it over to Japan again...

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