REVIEW: Manta Comics’ The Bromance Book Club

Men, don’t turn your noses up at romance novels. Not only are these books great reads, but they also have the power to save relationships. Manta Comics has been venturing into adapting novels from the West into webcomics, and Lyssa Kay Adams’s 2019 top-ranked romance book from Amazon Book Reviews recently became the second novel on its platform to turn into a webcomic. Translated by Choi Seol Hee and Golden Time and adapted into a webcomic by Anina with production by Sooyeon Chae, The Bromance Book Club has the potential to be something great.On the outside, Nashville Legends’s second baseman Gavin Scott seems to have it all. He has a successful baseball career, a beautiful wife, and two beautiful twin girls. But this sports legend’s life at home is a complete wreck. His marriage with his wife, Thea, is on the brink of divorce. Gavin doesn’t know where to begin fixing his relationship, but the answer to that may lie in a secret book club where macho men gather to read romance novels.Adapting a novel into a webcomic is no small task, but The Bromance Book Club does an incredible job of making readers laugh. In comparing Manta Comics’ webcomic version to the original novel, it certainly elevates the humor that is one of the trademarks of Adams’s book. Anina makes perfect use of the webcomic medium to augment the comedy with the use of chibi figures and a variety of expressions that flit across the characters’ faces that would normally be difficult to describe in prose. It adds new scenes that slot well into the medium, like the parodying The Creation of Adam and comparing Gavin to The Little Mermaid when he’s found drunk in his bathtub.RELATED: REVIEW: Manta Comics’ Under the Oak Tree Season 3

Men, don’t turn your noses up at romance novels. Not only are these books great reads, but they also have the power to save relationships. Manta Comics has been venturing into adapting novels from the West into webcomics, and Lyssa Kay Adams’s 2019 top-ranked romance book from Amazon Book Reviews recently became the second novel on its platform to turn into a webcomic. Translated by Choi Seol Hee and Golden Time and adapted into a webcomic by Anina with production by Sooyeon Chae, The Bromance Book Club has the potential to be something great.

RELATED: REVIEW: Manta Comics’ Under the Oak Tree Season 3

On the outside, Nashville Legends’s second baseman Gavin Scott seems to have it all. He has a successful baseball career, a beautiful wife, and two beautiful twin girls. But this sports legend’s life at home is a complete wreck. His marriage with his wife, Thea, is on the brink of divorce. Gavin doesn’t know where to begin fixing his relationship, but the answer to that may lie in a secret book club where macho men gather to read romance novels.

Adapting a novel into a webcomic is no small task, but The Bromance Book Club does an incredible job of making readers laugh. In comparing Manta Comics’ webcomic version to the original novel, it certainly elevates the humor that is one of the trademarks of Adams’s book. Anina makes perfect use of the webcomic medium to augment the comedy with the use of chibi figures and a variety of expressions that flit across the characters’ faces that would normally be difficult to describe in prose. It adds new scenes that slot well into the medium, like the parodying The Creation of Adam and comparing Gavin to The Little Mermaid when he’s found drunk in his bathtub.

#REVIEW #Manta #Comics #Bromance #Book #Club

Note:- (Not all news on the site expresses the point of view of the site, but we transmit this news automatically and translate it through programmatic technology on the site and not from a human editor. The content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.))