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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Women love to love, too...
***Warning: This manga is NOT for children, as the plastic wrap and parental advisory sticker implies***

There's this general consensus, status quo, must-be-true conception going around that manga made for and by women must contain overly attractive men engaging in risky sex with each other... usually with a seriously DOM/SUB slant to it.

Let me...
Published on August 4, 2008 by N. S. Michael

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3.0 out of 5 stars Not as good as I was hoping...
2.5/5
I've been wanting to read the manga from Aurora/Luv Luv for a while, or, really, ever since I'd heard of the company. I wasn't very into this type of manga when they were being published, and I only started paying attention to the companies the last couple years, so I didn't know about it at the time. I found this volume by itself at a used book store, and was...
Published 1 month ago by Jude


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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Women love to love, too..., August 4, 2008
This review is from: Love For Dessert (Josei) (Luv Luv) (Paperback)
***Warning: This manga is NOT for children, as the plastic wrap and parental advisory sticker implies***

There's this general consensus, status quo, must-be-true conception going around that manga made for and by women must contain overly attractive men engaging in risky sex with each other... usually with a seriously DOM/SUB slant to it.

Let me be happy to tell you that it is NOT the case here....

Hana Aoi has put together a series of vignettes about twentysomething women in love... both falling and making. Love for Dessert touches on modes of attraction, motives, insecurities... pretty much everything young lovers wrestle with when just beginning a relationship, both emotional and physical.

From the coworkers whose tastes annoy each other just right, to the college tutor who falls for her student, to the hostess who (doesn't really, though maybe that one time) needs saving from her fallen state... each story is a self-contained snapshot of those heady moments of new love.

The volume is most certainly a lusty busty, but the love scenes (which are present in every chapter) are nothing worse than you'd find in your typical R-rated romantic drama. That's not to say a parent should ignore the plastic wrap, but folks shouldn't be scared the title is full-blown hentai.

The art is most certainly of the women's manga style, with soft lines and overly pretty men, but that's to be expected. As a guy, myself, it put me off a little (what with being annoyed that I'm not the ideal these women are looking for), but I'm not the target audience... and I was still able to enjoy the story without letting it bother me too much.

Overall the vignettes were direct, enjoyable, and full of subtle little touches to tug both the heart and the loins for both sexes. I would recommend this title to anyone who loves 'love,' both the emotion and the act, with the reminder caveat that this book is NOT for kids... but isn't porn, either.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars fluff and cute, December 27, 2008
This review is from: Love For Dessert (Josei) (Luv Luv) (Paperback)
Love for Dessert has several short stories about young, slightly stereotypical women and their love lives. Usually that description would turn me off from reading a book, but what I liked about the girls in these stories is that they all come realize that there's a little bit more to them than just the stereotype.
For example, there's a story about a girl, Yu, who is really attracted to guys in suits, or so she thinks. She comes to discover that, while she finds suits attractive, there is only one man in particular that she wants to see wearing a suit. Yu surprises herself and finds that she is not as shallow as she and everyone else thought.
The men in Love for Dessert are all very protective of the girls they care about and totally sweet with it. It's good to see the nice guys get the girl every once in a while.
The stories, like the art, are light and fluffy, and though the plots are sometimes a little far-fetched, there is a surprising amount of character development in some of them. Don't take it too seriously and it's a very nice read.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Modern Romance Novels with Pictures! Lol!, December 22, 2008
This review is from: Love For Dessert (Josei) (Luv Luv) (Paperback)
What can I say? I'm just a sucker for anything taboo or forbidden, and that includes inter-office romances! The title story is cute and sweet (literally) as it involves two coworkers who happen to have opposite "tastes" in food and everything else (the girl has an extreme sweet tooth and the guy hates sweets) who happen to reach a point of compromise when they fall in love and make out ^_^ I'm sure most of us have, at one point, been guilty of indulging in the sweet nector of romantic cliches and enjoyed it! And I'm sure most of us wouldn't mind indulging again with Love for Dessert. The characters are sweet, the romantic storylines are sweet, and the art style is light and sweet. Even the sex is sweet (to a sugar high level)! Those who are afraid of getting traumatized by hard-core x-rated sex with questionable beings or objects need no fear! The sex in Love for Dessert is just as it says, light and sweet with just enouugh kick in it to give you a little rush ^_^ I'm sure that readers who choose this title will end up with a huge cavity after going through this one!

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome!!!, December 18, 2008
By 
Samantha "The DJ" (In my stories, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Love For Dessert (Josei) (Luv Luv) (Paperback)
I really like sweet, to the point titles like this one. To the point meaning, you get right into the love and the sex. The art style may be cute and endearing, but it's also very sexy! Sadly, I think I also feel the pain that some of these girls are into... at least as far as relating to having a dream about the cute guy you work with, or having tension with him. It's never a good idea to mix romance and office drama, but it definitely makes for a sweet Manga! I'd highly reccomend this for fellow Manga and Anime fans!!!
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3.0 out of 5 stars Not as good as I was hoping..., December 27, 2011
This review is from: Love For Dessert (Josei) (Luv Luv) (Paperback)
2.5/5
I've been wanting to read the manga from Aurora/Luv Luv for a while, or, really, ever since I'd heard of the company. I wasn't very into this type of manga when they were being published, and I only started paying attention to the companies the last couple years, so I didn't know about it at the time. I found this volume by itself at a used book store, and was very excited about it.
It wasn't as good as I was hoping it would be, though, which I'm a bit disappointed by. I hope that some of the others released by Luv Luv/Aurora are better.
The manga is a one shot full of short stories. I didn't know this, but I didn't mind it. It's also full of smut, which I did know, but could have been better.
The first story, 'Love for Dessert', is about a girl working in an office who likes one of her co-workers, but is always staying late to work with a different one who is very stand-off-ish. The guy she likes turns out to be a jerk and she ends up falling for the one she's always working for. The title comes from the fact that the girl like whipped cream, he doesn't, and they play with it a little.
The second one, 'Icing on the Cake', is about a high maintenance girl who is thinking of dumping her boyfriend until she sees him in a suit. He had a not very good job before, and when she sees him in a suit for his new job, she assumes that it's a higher paying job. Anyway, they get into a fight about the suit, she goes on a group date and finds out that she 'only likes him in a suit', and they make up. I understand, kind of, having a suit fetish, but the part about only liking him in one wasn't done very well. I didn't believe it, and she was a high maintenance girl, which is never really brought up or done anything about.
The third story, 'Bubblegum Princess', is about a stuck up girl who's mom dresses her up in lolita clothing. She ends up falling for a boy who she knew as a little girl that stays with them so he can work as a hairdresser. They fight at first, and then she finds herself falling for him and apparently he's already fallen for her. And there's a subplot about how she believes that her mom only sees her as a dress up doll, which is solved in, like, a page. And also, she wears glasses, and on the last page, something is thrown in about them not helping her see. But nothing about her glasses was mentioned before that, and it bothered me. I just didn't like her very much.
The fourth story, 'Red Bean', I actually did kind of like. It's about a girl who works at a host club, but everyone at school thinks that she's a prostitute, but this mostly bothers her, and she feels no shame about it. She starts getting close to a guy, who everyone calls Bean because of his hair, and who gets embarrassed very easily. She finds it cute, and is usually the cause of it. She doesn't tell him about her job until he saves her from a stalker customer, and he's embarrassed but happy about it. But then she decides to quit her job, and even though she says it's because of the customer being pushy, it seems a bit more because he doesn't really like it.
'Sweet Future', the fifth story, is about a girl who is having problems finding a job and that sees a fortune teller often. Her boyfriend doesn't understand it, openly disapproves of it, and then gets her a small, temporary job tutoring a boy. She isn't getting along with her boyfriend, which I understand, because she's sensitive and he is all business. Anyway, the fortune teller, Joseph, is stalking her, and her student saves her from it. She falls for the student, who is adorable, and he likes her back. It still feels a little weird, though, because she's his teacher. I'm not really sure what the age difference is, though, and that might make is better.
The last story, 'Puppy Chow', is about a girl who is going out with an outgoing boy that likes giving her choices. She thinks, though, that he just can't make decisions, and starts going back out with her last boyfriend who chose everything for her and that cheats on her again. There's a big thing about her not being who she really is, which is true, but I don't think that just going back to the boy from the beginning helps her solve it. She does end up going back to the boy from the beginning, who happily takes her back, and he find some puppies, which is kind of where the title comes from.
This whole thing wasn't all that good. I liked 'Red Bean' most, as I said earlier. And I guess I liked the couple from 'Puppy Chow', and despite me, I did kind of like the couple from 'Sweet Future'. I liked the boy from 'Bubblegum Princess'. That's mostly it, I think. The stories were a bit flat, which might be because of the short length of each story, but it also might not be. The art is what bothered me most, probably. It was a little flat, didn't really show their expressions very well, and just wasn't very good. And I'm a little picky with art. Also, though, the romance and smut weren't very good. I was hoping it would be really good. It didn't get me all hot 'n bothered. Not at all. And it wasn't even all that romantic, really. It was disappointing.
Also, the picture on the back cover is bothering me. It's kind of pretty, but it has nothing to do with any of the stories in the book. Does it? 'cause if it does, I missed it. I like it, though.
So, this wasn't a very good volume to start with from Aurora. I hope that I can find more, though, because I want the other ones, still.
Sidenotes: Why does Amazon still have some in stock, with 'more on the way'? Aurora is closed, isn't it? Didn't it close, like, two years ago or something? Shouldn't the books be out of print? I thought they were... Whatever, I guess.
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Love For Dessert (Josei) (Luv Luv)
Love For Dessert (Josei) (Luv Luv) by Hana Aoi (Paperback - May 29, 2008)
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