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Only The Ring Finger Knows Volume 3: The Ring Finger Falls Silent (Yaoi Novel) | 
| Authors: Satoru Kannagi, Hotaru Odagiri Publisher: Digital Manga Publishing
List Price: $8.95 Buy New: $4.25 You Save: $4.70 (53%)
Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 131801
Media: Paperback Pages: 250 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 6.7 x 4.3 x 0.9
ISBN: 1569708843 Dewey Decimal Number: 741.5952 EAN: 9781569708842 ASIN: 1569708843
Publication Date: November 1, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description After all the studying he did for his exams, sacrificing time with his boyfriend Yuichi, Wataru gets a measly C-average on his summer prep test. Yuichi's college classmate Asaka offers to tutor him, and he eagerly accepts. Wataru finds Asaka's cool beauty and attitude strikingly similar to that of Yuichi's, and subconsciously becomes vulnerable to his advances. For the first time in their relationship, Yuichi becomes enraged. Will they be able to overcome this new obstacle?!
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| Customer Reviews:
only the ring finger knows volume 3: the ring finger falls silent September 25, 2007 Laurinda M. Novak 0 out of 3 found this review helpful
It was awesome!!!!!!!! i loved it! at was like new when i go it. and it was one of the best books i ever read. it wasn't actual manga 'cause it not a comic but it was just like reading a manga as far as plot and stuff. and the art was fantastic.
Must read it January 18, 2007 Nora Friedlin (Riehen, S Switzerland) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
I like this books because it thaks me in. I'm not a big reader but I read it in 2 days. The story flows and I want to know what happens next. A good advise read it!!!
If you've come this far, there is already no turning back: Resign yourself to this book. November 2, 2006 T. LaPonte (Connecticut) 12 out of 12 found this review helpful
Volume three of the Only the Ring Finger Knows novel series, The Ring Finger Falls Silent, suffers many of the same problems that its predecessor, The Left Hand Dreams of Him, did. Again it is translated by Duane Johnson, and again it suffers many instances of awkward sentence structure, and particularly very confusing dialogue and unquoted or even not so much as clearly defined thoughts. It is however an improvement in quality over the last volume (did DMP perhaps read my previous review and take notes? Too much to hope for, I know...), which was almost laughable for its many typographic and grammatical errors. There were also a number of instances of hyphens attached to the word "in" and a word to follow it, that seemed very out of place (was I the only one drawn to this?). Odagiri's illustrations are again beautifully drawn, but of course, as in volume 2, they are out of place. Each of them seem to be several pages late in this volume, and in a few of the more pivotal moments, the allure that would have been added to the scene is lost and the scene has changed focus by the time the reader gets to experience the illustration. Very unfortunate. That aside, this installment doesn't hold quite as much emotional power as the previous two installments. As the loyal readers, which if you have followed these awkward DMP localizations you must be to plow through a third book, we get our Yuichi/Wataru fix satisfied. Their love is as strong for each other as ever, but always at a difficult price. Their relationship is only known to a few, and the number of people who know and do not approve is on the rise, as we discovered in volume 2. Shohei in particular makes his intentions and reasonings behind his attitude towards his younger brother's relationship known and he hatches a plot to drive a wedge between them in part 2, Your Confession in Both Hands. For his part, Asaka in part 1, also makes his intentions, long suspected by Yuichi, and us, known to Wataru as well with some forward and desperate, and ultimately hopeless, actions. Don't worry though, everything, like it always does to fill our hearts with warmth reading the books of this wonderful series, works out just fine for our boys in the end. The Ring Finger Falls Silent is quite a bit longer that the second novel, which itself was quite a bit longer than the first novel (about 50 pages increased each volume) and therefore took me an extra hour or two to get through. More for your money I suppose. The love scenes are more descriptive in this volume, for those who are interested in the graphic romantic bits, but there are fewer scenes of Yuichi an Wataru's physical relationship. Instead of being merely flowery some actual spacial detail is provided, though it still retains the beauty of Kannagi's poetic style. The afterward by Kannagi herself is probably the most hopeful part in the whole book, though. Within those few pages we are revealed that this storyline is not quite done with and we can look ahead to more novels from our fair author and her loyal illustrator chronicalling the deep love and bond of our heroes, Yuichi and Wataru, in the coming years.
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