Wandance

Coffee

Book - 2022

"Kaboku Kotani is starting high school, and he plans to do what he's always done: go along with his friends, keep quiet, and not draw too much attention to himself. After all, it's hard enough to get by with a stutter like his -- why make things worse by standing out from the crowd? But then he sees another first-year, Hikari Wanda, dancing like no one is watching -- or like she doesn't care who sees her. It makes Kaboku wonder: Could he reach that same freedom? To find his way to Wanda, he does something he never thought he could: He joins the dance club. After all, every routine begins with a single step, right?" -- Back cover of volume 1.

Saved in:

2nd Floor Comics Show me where

MANGA/Coffee/Wandance
vol. 1: 1 / 1 copies available
vol. 2: 1 / 1 copies available
vol. 3: 1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor Comics MANGA/Coffee/Wandance v. 1 Checked In
2nd Floor Comics MANGA/Coffee/Wandance v. 2 Checked In
2nd Floor Comics MANGA/Coffee/Wandance v. 3 Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Comics (Graphic works)
Graphic novels
School comics
Manga
Published
New York : Kodansha USA Publishing Ltd [2022]-
Language
English
Main Author
Coffee (author)
Other Authors
Kevin Steinbach (translator), Nicole Roderick (letterer)
Item Description
Reads from right to left.
Description based on volume 1.
Physical Description
volumes : chiefly illustrations (some color) ; 21 cm
Audience
Rated: Teen 13+
ISBN
9781646514663
9781646515165
9781646515172
9781646515189
9781646515196
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Kaboku has a speech impediment that makes everyone think he's overly nervous around them, but he's not--he'd just rather nobody take notice of him at all. One day, he sees Wanda-san, a girl from his class, dancing outside school as if she doesn't care who can see her. Her movements inspire him, but he's petrified of what others will think of him as he dances. After attending a Dance Club meeting, Wanda helps Kaboku suppress some of his feelings of self-doubt and anxiety to be able to dance with abandon as she does, and he turns out to be an impressive dancer with a keen sense of music and rhythm. Coffee manages to capture hip-hop dance in the illustrations and create a sense of movement on the page despite the static medium. The main characters could use a little more development to be fully realized people, but instead some of that space is used to focus on dance. This isn't an explainer-manga, though, and it's definitely written for those who already have some idea of musical terms and body movements. This story is in the vein of Tsubasa Yamaguchi's Blue Period or Naoshi Arakawa's Your Lie in April, where characters devote themselves completely to artistic exploration, and will definitely resonate with readers who are artistically inclined.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.