Rosario+Vampire, Vol. 7

Rosario+Vampire, Vol. 7 by Akihisa Ikeda
Series Name: Rosario+Vampire
Genres: Action, Comedy, Ecchi, Fantasy, Harem, Monsters, Romance, Vampires, Witches
Intended Age Group: Older Teen
Publisher: Viz/Shonen Jump Advanced
Edition: Paperback 
ISBN: 978-1-4215-1909-8
Rating: 4/5
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Description from the Book

All-around average teenager Tsukune can’t get accepted to any high school save one…but on his first day, he finds the rest of the student body doesn’t appear average in the least. Best of all, the cutest girl on campus can’t wait to fling her arms around his neck! Wait a sec’ – are those her teeth around his neck too…? Tsukune’s going to have one heck of a hickey when he gets home from Monster High! But does he have a chance in H-E-double-hockey-sticks of raising his grades at a school where the turf war isn’t between jocks and the nerds but the vampires and the werewolves?

Personal & Info

Since I’ve already read a large chunk of the series before, I’m giving the volumes I’ve already read a slight bump in rating to show how much I liked it my first time through. I don’t want my familiarity with the series to hurt the score. There is less thrill when you already know what happens, so I’m accounting for that. The bump is only about a half star.

Characters

Tsukune Aono is your every day incredibly average underachiever human with no special skills…But the human part might be changing permanently.

Moka Akashiya is a beautiful vampire love interest.

Kurumu Kurono is beautiful love interest number two. She is the passionate big booby lady.

Yukari Sendo is an eleven year old genius, and a witch.

Mizore Shirayuki is love interest number three. She is shy and a bit of a stalker.

Story & Thoughts

The book picks up where volume six left off with the cliffhanger. It’s resolved fairly quickly, and the manga seems to go back to monster of the week for each chapter. Most of the monsters are currently monstrels, though, so they don’t all get encyclopedias.

Some characters experience growth here as they are put under pressure from recent events. Tsukune experiences more changes, and he’s encouraged to leave school. Of course, we all know he won’t.

It’s subtle, but something I love about this volume is when Mizore speaks up. She clearly cares about what is best for Tsukune, and what would make him happy. His choices and what he wants are what matter to her. Kurumu worries about his safety, but Mizore worries about his happiness. I love that about her, and it starts to shine through a little here.

Something kind of silly, I noticed Moka was wearing a cute tank top and jeans when she answered the door for Kurumu. For some reason she felt the need to change into a dress before she left her room to follow Kurumu. I’m not sure why this was necessary.