I think my son is gay manga
I Think Our Son is Lgbtq+ Vol. 5 The Attention Shifts in the Final Volume of Okuras Heartwarming Manga Tale of Family and Acceptance
PRIDE MONTH ! If it’s Pride Month at Broken Frontier then it must be time for another review of Okura’s manga series I Think Our Son is Gay. We covered the first two volumes in June , the third and fourth entries in June , and here we are again with the fifth and final number for Pride Beginning as an endearing but formulaic collection of brief strips, I Think Our Son is Gay has evolved in its five volumes as overarching story arcs and character training moved ever further to the frontline in place of its original, semi-punchline led set-up.
That unique premise played with the concept that Tomoko, the mother of the book’s focus character Hiroki Aoyama, had come to suspect her schoolboy son was lgbtq+ but not yet confident to come out. Early strips used a gentle observational humour in an “is he or isn’t he?” series of shorts. Other cast members include Hiroki’s small brother Yuri, his well-intentioned but tactless father Akiyoshi, his fema
guys have you peruse this manga
(sorry for bad quality)
its called "My Son is Probably Gay" (alternative titles include Uchi no Musuko wa Tabun Gei, うちの息子はたぶんゲイ)
it's abt the relationship between a mom and her son who tries his hardest of not being the adorable obvious fool he is having crushes on boys
consider:
- absolutely adorable style (especially the mom omg just look at her)
- very fresh manga, started in Sep I think? a lot of room for updates in the future!
- a mother creature so absolutely loving of his son she appreciates everything he tells her and instead of growing up in society's mold of what a "man" is, she wants him to communicate himself and adopt everything he holds dear to his heart
- ohngmy god she is who i aspire to b e
here are two snippets of the series!!
please support the artist (Okura)!!
New this month from Square Enix Manga is I Think Our Son is Gay a hilarious LGBTQIA+-friendly family comedy. Despite belonging to a family of four, the Aoyama residence is typically place to three due to father Akiyoshi’s job. While he’s away at function, mum Tomoko and her two beloved sons Hiroki and Yuri go about their everyday lives going to school, making dinner, doing homework, etc. But now that Hiroki’s in his first year of high school, his thoughts are turning ever so slightly to sex and romance… and his mum can’t help but notice his slips of the tongue when he’s talking about who he likes. Supportive Tomoko has an inkling Hiroki might be gay, but she’s going to let him figure it out for himself. Unfortunately, Hiroki has little talent for keeping his “secret,” so he might die of embarrassment before all is said and done!
There’s been an influx of quality gender non-conforming manga released in English in recent years which has gone a drawn-out way in improving the genre’s reputation that it had unfairly previously gained of being mostly centred around explicit material. On the
Tomoko Aoyama
I Consider Our Son Is Gay (Uchi no Musuko wa Tabun Gay) is a comedy Slice of Animation manga by Okura about a Japanese family whose eldest son is probably gay.
It's mainly told from the point of view of the open-minded mom Tomoko, but the highlight is on the eldest son Hiroki and his (terrible) attempts at hiding his sexuality. The family also includes the younger brother Yuri, who's peaceful but notices more than he lets on; and the father Akiyoshi, who tries to do as much quality parenting as he can when he's not away on business.
The manga began its scamper in Gangan Pixiv in and concluded in Square Enix Manga & Books announced that they will be publishing the manga in English in May
Compare to the author's previous work, That Sky Sky Feeling, about several teens exploring their orientations.
This series provides examples of:
- Ambiguously Bi: Daigo. It's unclear whether Hiroki's attraction to him is reciprocated or even noticed. He doesn't get embarrassed by getting close to