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17 Reviews
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22 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Hail to the Queen....er, King!,
By Kellyannl (Bronx, NY USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Fruits Basket, Vol. 13 (Paperback)
This volume is a huge one for both of Tohru's favorite nii-sans as one big brother's dream comes true while the others' goes down in flames - at least for the time being.
First up, in the wake of the wrap-up of the Kyo/Kagura storyline, is the climax of the Yuki/Ayame subplot. Most readers were probably expecting this to go down closer to the end of the series, but Aya is really a supporting character and the timing is just about right considering how much there still is to cover. Ayame himself admits that he bears his share of responsibility for Yuki's childhood situation deteriorating to the point it did and that he's lucky Yuki is on speaking terms with him. But he's so genuinely remorseful and trying the only way he knows how to make things up to Yuki that it's impossible not to root for him as he faces his moment of truth and squares off against their venomous mother to protect Yuki the way he should have years ago. Will Aya pull it off? Did anyone really think he was heading for a sad ending? Unlike Ayame, Momiji is completely guiltless regarding his situation. But sometimes innocence isn't enough and life isn't always fair. The selfless young man is asked to make yet another huge sacrifice for his immediate family when his little sister Momo, now old enough to walk short distances without adult supervision, begins to actively seek him out - and starts to get too close to the truth their father feels she isn't ready to handle yet. Perhaps the most seamless mixture of joy and angst so far.
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Vol. 13 - Yuki-kun Gets Greater Focus,
By AstroNerdBoy "AstroNerdBoy" (Denver, CO) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Fruits Basket, Vol. 13 (Paperback)
In this 13th volume of "Fruits Basket," we finally get to meet Yuki-kun and Ayame-san's mother when she attends a parent teacher conference. She already has Yuki-kun's life planned out, but can Ayame-niisan save the day?
Yuki-kun, as president of the Student Council, then has to deal with the strong personalities that make up the Student Council officer. Can he survive them, especially Vice President who has a Power Ranger complex? Next, Tohru goes on mission to the Sohma Estate to meet with Kureno-san after coming to believe this is the man that Uo-chan has fallen in love with. Along the way, she has a chance encounter with Momo-chan, who reveals some very interesting things. Can Tohru meet with Kureno-san without Akito-san finding out? Finally, the class trip is finally taken. Yuki-kun, Kyo-kun, Tohru, Uo-chan, and Hana-chan are grouped together which is sure to lead to fun. In this volume, Takaya-sensei takes time to explore how Yuki came to be via his mother. This was an interesting story which showed how much Yuki had grown. Ditto Ayame. Yuki having to deal with the headaches of being Student Council President are weaker since the people that are the officers are mostly annoying. Tohru isn't as happy-go-lucky in this volume as in previous ones. However, I was glad to see the Momo-story touched again, not to mention there's table-setting going on for Kureno-san's character. With these stories being told, Takaya-sensei never forgets why we read the manga and thus doesn't lose focus on that. As such, she doesn't get bogged down in the story of Yuki and Ayame's mother. She doesn't get bogged down in the Momo/Momiji story. She continues to press forward, which helps a lot. As usual, Alethea & Athena Nibley do fantastic, otaku-friendly work. Considering that this debuted in the top-50 of book sales, then rose to the 30's the next week, I guess that goes to show that Japanese honorifics and other otaku language being left in the translation can enhance the readers enjoyment of the title. It certainly does mine. I only wish TokyoPop had a translator note section in their manga. Bottom line: more "Furuba" goodness from Takaya-sensei.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
simply perfect,
By furuba love "saki" (usa) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Fruits Basket, Vol. 13 (Paperback)
fruits basket is the best series i have read to date, so i may be biased. but even though this is not the most ground-breaking volume, i love the things we discover about yuki, momiji, kakeru, and kureno that make the story more interesting. i've never seen character development as excellent as fruits basket. also, the simple thoughts and actions of the characters make the manga feel close to home and relatable to our own lives. it seems that the manga improves with every volume, because the characters change, grow, and become more appealing and wonderful. reading fruits basket never fails to be a special treat.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
<3,
By Lexis (Tennesse, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Fruits Basket, Vol. 13 (Paperback)
Fruits Basket is by far my favorite Manga to date, and this is one of my favorite volumes.
I don't quite know why, it's not one of the most ground-breaking volumes, I just love all of the small things in it, like momo and kyo wiping tohoru's tears (I <3 Kyo) I don't know, but it is definatly worth it and here I go again waiting for volume 14. ^__^
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
interesting, but not much substance,
A Kid's Review
This review is from: Fruits Basket, Vol. 13 (Paperback)
This book is good, but definitely not my favorite in the series. There is some minor plot and character development, but little that is of actual substance. I feel like at this point, we are simply killing time for something else to happen, or perhaps killing time until graduation. Though it was nice to see the development between Yuki and Ayame, and between Yuki and the student council VP, I believe that the love triangle between Yuki, Tohru, and Kyo is the most intersting. The volume is an obvious necessity for anyone reading the series, but not one of Natsuki Takaya's best by far.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Absolutely Wonderful!,
This review is from: Fruits Basket, Vol. 13 (Paperback)
This volume was definately one of the best so far. It was so good, it surprised me! No part of this volume is boring. I loved the parts with Kureno (he's one of my favorite characters), and the class trip was the best! This volume raises LOTS of questions, those of which you'll have to find out for yourself. But trust me, this volume is so worthy of the $10 you'll have to spend, that I'll read it again after just reading it yesterday! Take my advice, you will love this volume. Fruits Basket really does put all else to shame!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I Love this series!,
By Hannah (Ohio) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Fruits Basket, Vol. 13 (Paperback)
I absolutly love this series. While at first it may seen strange you just can't help falling in love with the characters (<3 kyo) and their whole story. Before you know it you end up rooting along with the characters on their journies. While they are aimed at a teenage audience my mom aunt and 12 year old brother even enjoy them! This series was the first Manga I had ever read and its what actually got me started on reading manga and enjoying it. I Absolutly cannot wait until the 14th book comes out...
I highly recommend this series to everyone of all ages.
10 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
I hate to do this, but...,
By J. Fink "hodgemo2" (St. Louis, MO) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Fruits Basket, Vol. 13 (Paperback)
I just can't give this volume any more stars. Perhaps it is because Aya is not a favorite of mine. But I just didn't feel that anything got resolved in this volume. I didn't feel the culmination of the events between Yuki and Aya proved anything. I didn't understand the "tragic secret" about Momo. (I'm trying to not give anything away here) To me, the book just seemed like a filler. It was an interesting angle, with the Kureno story, but again, nothing got evenly remotely resolved.
It could be that I am just bitter that the main story got put on hold. Perhaps I'm just angry because I would rather find out what is going to happen in the Tohru, Yuki, Kyo triangle instead of hearing about the crazy guy in the student council. But I just really, really hope that this series isn't going all "GAINAX" on me...throwing in big metaphors, thunderclouds of mysteries that never get unravelled, and laying it all under a big blanket of symbolism. I wanna know that these secrets will be discovered at the end. What is the curse? Can Torhu break it? What is with Akito and Kureno? Please, let this not be the end of my guilty pleasure in reading this series!
1.0 out of 5 stars
SLOW!,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Fruits Basket, Vol. 13 (Paperback)
Not sure how the item is because it hasn't gotten here yet! Past the time I was told it would ship by. Almost a month now for 1 book. animeworks
5.0 out of 5 stars
A great volume of a great series,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Fruits Basket, Vol. 13 (Paperback)
This is an amazing series and the pace really picks up in this volume where all the back stories of the characters start to come out. Highly recommended!
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Fruits Basket, Vol. 13 by Natsuki Takaya (Paperback - April 11, 2006)
Used & New from: $5.19
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