I Belong to the Baddest Girl at School Volume 01

I Belong to the Baddest Girl at School Volume 01

  • Downloads:7473
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2021-09-10 07:51:00
  • Update Date:2025-09-06
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Ui Kashima
  • ISBN:1642731366
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

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Reviews

Viki

Basically this is a comedy (parody?) role reversal of the typical bad boy/shy girl trope that you see in a lot of shoujo fiction。 In this one the girl is the tough juvenile delinquent that is always getting into fights and the boy is the shy doormat that is kind and empathetic enough to see beyond the 'bad' image and see the kind heart underneath。。。 it also relies heavy on the misunderstandings / miscommunication trope to drive the plot, at least in the first volume。 Toramaru is the school 'boss Basically this is a comedy (parody?) role reversal of the typical bad boy/shy girl trope that you see in a lot of shoujo fiction。 In this one the girl is the tough juvenile delinquent that is always getting into fights and the boy is the shy doormat that is kind and empathetic enough to see beyond the 'bad' image and see the kind heart underneath。。。 it also relies heavy on the misunderstandings / miscommunication trope to drive the plot, at least in the first volume。 Toramaru is the school 'boss' she is rough and anyone who messes with her or those she cares about better be ready to fight。 She sees Unoki, a meek and nice guy and falls in love (at first sight?) and decides to make him hers。 Even though Toramaru is physically tough, she is quite tongue tied when talking to Unoki leading him to misinterpret her intentions, and usually assumes the worst and is just trying to appease her less she beat him up! It is pretty amusing how each is interpreting their conversations differently and completely dense to the feeling and intentions of the other。 By the end of volume one, Unoki seems to have started catching on and perhaps volume two will move the relationship a little further。Basically the book was cute and fun, but nothing really original or unpredictable。 。。。more

Mark

Unoki has basically spent his school life as a punching bag, but he’s somehow drawn the eye of Boss Toramaru, the school’s head delinquent。 Except Unoki is a total doormat and Toramaru can’t seem to express herself like a normal person, so we might be here for a while, folks…I mean, right off the (shonen) jump the premise here reminds me of Monthly Girls’ Nozaki-kin, where a plaintive romantic expression is misconstrued into something utterly different and wackiness is on the menu。 Except this s Unoki has basically spent his school life as a punching bag, but he’s somehow drawn the eye of Boss Toramaru, the school’s head delinquent。 Except Unoki is a total doormat and Toramaru can’t seem to express herself like a normal person, so we might be here for a while, folks…I mean, right off the (shonen) jump the premise here reminds me of Monthly Girls’ Nozaki-kin, where a plaintive romantic expression is misconstrued into something utterly different and wackiness is on the menu。 Except this sure isn’t Nozaki-kun。But it’s not a terrible book, that all being said。 It definitely has some rough edges - Toramaru can be pretty verbally abusive to her female subordinates (if they even ARE her subordinates) and you may need to assess your capacity for physical violence (I freely admit that some of the beatdowns in this volume are great)。 I also admit to laughing at examples of both during the cleaning chapter。The relationship is fun, even as it manages to be wholly predictable。 Unoki is the standard whipping boy who’s actually done nothing wrong and is a very attentive boyfriend, or slave, depending on whose viewpoint you’re on。 The way they intermingle their individual assessments of any given situation is pretty amusing (the roof where Unoki expects to get killed is a great example)。Part of why this works at all is because the designs are ungodly cute, from Toramaru’s jacket on down to her wooden shoes (the reason for her wearing them is probably my favourite part of the book) to Unoki’s fairly innocent state of being。 The expressions are always important in a comedy and some of them here, particularly when Toramaru is short-circuiting, are great。I also like the two flunkies, who are absolutely useless, but at least the one who is clearly our token ‘giant breast’ character turns out to be the smartest out of the four of them。 Her meddling in the name of love was a smart turn for her character。Honestly, there’s nothing here that you likely haven’t seen before, but they wrap it up in a pretty fun little wrapper that gives it enough of a push that I liked it。 I also thought it was a nice touch that Unoki is not as utterly oblivious as most people would be in this type of book (eventually)。It even manages the odd cute moment or two, buried beneath all the zany as things are going wrong and words are misconstrued。 Unoki starting to get the hint finally because Toramaru reveals why she chose him in the first place, via a trope I happen to like, is pretty sweet。3 stars, 3。5 possibly, maybe。 But not the sort of book I feel like I can round up just yet。 It’s certainly not the best thing ever, but it’s good and enjoyable if you like this sort of thing。 Definite second volume for me。 。。。more

Rebecca

Toramaru is the boss of the school。 She has a crush on Unoki, thinks she's asked him out, and that they're dating。Unoki is the punching bag at school。 He thinks Toramaru has asked him to be her gopher and that he's her whipping boy。What could possibly go wrong? Toramaru is the boss of the school。 She has a crush on Unoki, thinks she's asked him out, and that they're dating。Unoki is the punching bag at school。 He thinks Toramaru has asked him to be her gopher and that he's her whipping boy。What could possibly go wrong? 。。。more