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L**K
Fade to Cuteness
Cute story and graphics. Rara is so adorable. Kept bursting out in laughter and waking up my bedmate. Think it's a single so it's not much of a commitment to check out. Fun times, shōjo-style.
K**S
It is a lovely manga and I enjoy how well cared for it was
I was nervous with how it was priced, as to what condition I would recieve this book in. But it was only curved from being read a few times before. It is a lovely manga and I enjoy how well cared for it was. I was not decieved and the price was way cheap. If only there were more of this series than the one book.
B**Y
Happy manga girl
Gaba Kawa is always a great pick for manga lovers. I got this as a gift for a friend who is new to manga. She loved it!
Z**L
Good, But Not Great
First things first: you should all know that, although it says "Volume 1" up there, implying that there's more than one book, Gaba Kawa is a one-volume short story. I mention this because for the longest time, I didn't buy Gaba Kawa because I was hesitant to get hooked on a new series. Darn you Amazon! xDThat out of the way, onto the review!Gaba Kawa is the story of a young demon girl's search for love. Rara, sent to Earth to cause nothing but mischief, finds herself falling in love with a hot human boy. So begins her wacky attempts to worm her way into Retsu Aku's heart.This would be your normal romantic comedy except for one very important factor: whenever demons use their powers to help humans, they lose that power. Lose enough and the demon will disappear entirely! This brings up a question that every true shojo heroine must answer for herself: Is true love worth dying for?Overall, I really liked this book. The characters were cute and entertaining. While it sometimes strayed from total believability (come on, it's a story about a love-struck demon!) I'm glad I bought it, and I plan to check out more from Rie Takada. If not for one small problem, I'd slap 5 stars on this baby and call it a day.Since this is a one-volume series, the main question for me was: does it end well? Too often do I see short series scramble to wrap up everything in the last chapter. Unfortunately, Gaba Kawa falls victim to this. Instead of being a fitting conclusion to a funny series, it seems rushed and not very thought out. Gaba Kawa is a manga that just misses being "Great" and is instead regulated to merely "Good".If you're in the mood for a quick read with cute characters, this is the one for you.If you're in the mood for something that you'll want to read again and again... look elsewhere, my friend.
E**.
Demon Girl in Love
I read "Gaba Kawa" during its run in Shojo Beat, but I liked it enough to buy it later.The story is probably not so original, but Takada adds some interesting twists to it that keep things fresh. The tone is humorous, and there are a lot of funny moments. Most of the humor depends upon Rara herself. She's kind of... weird for a shojo heroine, but that's what makes her interesting. She's always pulling some kind of stunt to get near Retsu. He's a pretty good character himself, though not as good as Rara. He's typically good looking, but he's more reserved than most shojo love interests, and he's surprisingly unpopular with the girls. The art is cute and lends to the light tone of the story. Rara's chibi forms are especially good."Gaba Kawa" might fall flat if it were a longer series, but it's good for a one-shot. The story is interesing and moves at a good pace. Takada also manages to put a lot of personality into her characters, which is very difficult to do in just one volume. This is a great manga to buy if you want to read something new but don't want to commit to a whole series.
G**M
Kawa's Pleasures are Simple and Undeniable
This manga's title, which loosely translated means "so stubborn it's cute," tells a reader everything she needs to know. Gaba Kawa is so fluffy it almost floats off the page, and so persistently precocious it can hardly be resisted, buoyed as it is by Rie Takada's over-the-top artwork and airy-fairy plotting. (One can almost imagine Takada dotting I's with hearts or smiley faces.) Many of contemporary manga's rougher, more provocative edges are sanded into submission in this childlike outing; Gaba Kawa is for younger readers, newbies to the medium.Yet tame need not be a dirty word, for Gaba Kawa is rich with simple pleasures, telling the story of Rara, a demon who visits the human world in search of another legendary demon, but instead falls in love with Aku, a human baring the demon's name. Rara swoons for the human's charms, helpless as she falls in love with him, even as she realizes he is human. (That said, Aku has his own little hiccup: He sees dead people, natch.) Takada's narrative finds a bit of dramatic tension in Rara's dilemma: The more she falls in love and surrenders to her new love, the more vulnerable she becomes. Indeed, selflessness spells extinction for demons.Still, Takada--who fared better with Punch and Happy Hustle High--is in a playful, willfully naïve mode here, less interested in plowing fresh dramatic terrain than in reveling in the rainbows-and-unicorns of young romance. Gaba Kawa'sstoryline--cute demon girl falls for hot human boy; Buffy-lite--is breezy, helium-filled, and almost entirely incidental to its celebration of giddy innocence and cutesy characterizations. Takada excels at finding the humor, broad as it is, in her spunky characters and their star-crossed attraction. (Romeo & Juliet this isn't.) Rara is an adorable demon but completely inept at the dark arts, while handsome Aku's ability to see ghosts is among his only distinct qualities.For a quick fling, though, Gaba Kawa's pleasures are simple and undeniable, beautifully and cheerfully drawn, a story sweetly told, a comedy through and through, suitable for young readers and those who are young of heart.-- J. Rentilly
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