“Two-part boys-love story spanning generations: childhood friends to university lovers facing family acceptance.”
At the Flower Capital: Hana no Miyako de
花のみやこで
Would You Love or Hate This?
AI-powered analysis tailored to your taste
Based on your preference for character-driven stories with layered emotional arcs, this title's exploration of identity and belonging would deeply resonate. The pacing mirrors series you've rated highly, and its thematic depth aligns with your appreciation for nuanced storytelling...
However, the slow initial episodes might test your patience given your history of dropping shows that don't hook you early. The art style shift in the middle arc could also be a concern...
Synopsis
Two-part boys-love story spanning generations: childhood friends to university lovers facing family acceptance.
Hana no Miyako de Motoharu Tsujimura and Akira Hazumi belong to different social classes, but despite that, they have been friends since childhood. A rift grows between them when Motoharu confesses his love to Akira and is rejected, yet even this is not enough to completely drive them apart. When Akira, who is greatly interested in botany, chooses a certain university at which to study agriculture, Motoharu follows him to the same school and department. One afternoon, Akira asks to walk home together with Motoharu, like they used to do—only this time, Akira intends to discuss something important that will impact both their futures. Hana no Migoro ni Youichi Arikawa and Shouta Misaki came to know each other when they both served as assistants to Professor Tsujimura in his agricultural laboratory. The two of them fell in love, and now they live together in the old house that Misaki inherited from his late grandfather Akira. Having grown older and graduated from university, Arikawa and Misaki experience new strains on their relationship, different from the ones they are used to. Outside the walls of their home, they are regarded as friends and roommates. Arikawa's mother wants the two to visit during a holiday weekend, but though Arikawa proposes to tell her that he and Misaki are going out, the latter prefers to keep the truth silent. Unexpectedly, Arikawa's older sister returns home on the same weekend.
What people say
Community consensus
Derived from 5 sampled reviews
What 5 readers settled on.
Mostly aligned
σ 1.55 · some divergence
—
Not enough recommend signal yet
↓ 1.00
Running avg · May 2013 → Dec 2021
- 9 “I like melancholy, and this manga has a very melancholic mood. The story is simple, nothing particularly special about it...The interesting thing about this manga lies more in the "atmosphere"......”
- 9 “This manga is a prequel of Hana nomi zo Shiru, but it can be read as a standalone story and works very well on its own. The story is simple yet powerful, it works around the conflict in a...”
- 8 “Fresh off reading the parent story, Only the flower knows, I got into this thinking it would be just your average sequel/prequel and I was, in fact, wrong. “Hana no miyako de” 9/10 I loved it. I’m...”
Read Order & Related
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A Manga Publication
- Format 5 × 1 ch × vol
- Total read 0h 40m approx
- Published Sep 2012 – Jan 2013
- Source Manga media type
- Ref. BS-M20597 catalog