Chéri, My Destiny! looks like a cute food manga about two young men falling for each other while making sweets, but by the time we reach the final chapter (of four) in the story, it’s well earned its mature (18+) rating.
Sakura manages a shop that sells Western-style chocolates as well as desserts near a confectionary that sells Japanese-style treats. Sakura gets competitive, so he checks the other place out, where he sees that they’ve got lots of young female customers. Sakura is insecure about how Western-style confections are better, insisting Japanese-style are old-fashioned, but Sojiro, manager of the traditional store, is unflappable about the whole thing, thinking each can be enjoyed for what they offer.
When he finds out Sojiro hasn’t had Western-style sweets, Sakura starts bringing him samples. before he realizes it, he’s fallen for his “competitor”. I suspect the Western-trained confectioner being over-emotional as well as extreme while the Japanese heir is calm as well as well-balanced is an intentional contrast. It’s amusing, though, seeing Sojiro being mature as well as thoughtful while Sakura blows his top, as well as there’s a long tradition of opposites attracting. I was rooting for these two to talk to each other.
They finally kiss, then, halfway through chapter 3, the sweet romance jumps the tracks to something much more explicit. After an invitation using the F-word, chapter 4 presents fully nude penetrative sex (and not-good non-consensual interaction to go with it, as Sakura sneaks whiskey into chocolates without telling Sojiro what he’s doing, knowing his partner doesn’t want to drink).
After the sex scene, the book ends with a few short romantic moments between the two. In the concluding author’s note, Okoge Mochino mentions this being only their 2nd BL manga (and implies that it may be their second ever). I wasn’t surprised. There’s an overall lack of detail common to newer creators — few actual dessert names, for instance, or details about the candy — although artistically, there are plenty of backgrounds as well as scene setting.
The visual element that stood out to me most was how much the boys’ heads looked like puffballs. They have smaller faces as well as giant mops of hair. Overall, the art is sufficient to the story, with some lovely images of the chocolates as well as some heartfelt portraits of the young men when they are full of emotion. The rest just moves us between the two.
Sakura is our viewpoint character, as well as we don’t get to see much of what motivates or drives Sojiro. various plotlines are mentioned but insufficiently followed up on, mostly around his family status. He briefly has a fianceé, for example, but only for a temporary dramatic obstacle. There’s likewise little known about Sakura’s background — he’s French-trained, but in a longer series, I imagine we’d know more about why as well as how as well as his family background (which here doesn’t exist).
As it stands, if you’re comfortable with the explicit material as well as the abrupt change in tone (which feels like “ok, they’re together, now the smut!”), this is a cute single-volume read, although its brevity may be a little unsatisfying afterwards.
Chéri, My Destiny! is due out July 20 in print (and can be preordered now from your local comic shop with diamond code APR21 2265). Oddly, it’s promised at Amazon to be available digitally may 10, two months earlier. (The publisher provided a digital review copy.)
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