



Kokoro Connect is the story of five high school freshman who make up a club at their school called the Student Cultural Society. Because less than a month later, I read this shojo, and I absolutely loved it. Well, I already feel silly for thinking that. I’m done with shojos now - I’ll just stuck to other genres when I want to read manga.” And when, as I predicted, I didn’t like the manga, I thought to myself, “That’s it. That manga was going to be my last-ditch attempt at finding something to enjoy in the genre before giving up on it altogether. That was the first review of a Shojo manga I did for this blog, but I read several in the past, and in some ways, I tried to make my review of Alice in the Country of Hearts into a cumulative review of all the Shojo I had read. In that review, I talked about how I was growing to suspect that Shojo just wasn’t for me, and that no matter how hard I tried to enjoy it, I couldn’t help but start nitpicking. Earlier this month, I wrote a review of the first volume of Alice in the Country of Hearts.
