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21
4
Finished
Oct 25, 1999 to Sep 25, 2002
8.0/10
Average Review Score
100%
Recommend It
1
Reviews Worldwide
The general summary of Gorgeous Carat youâll find if youâre trying to decide whether to read it is that a phantom thief becomes enamoured of a young manâs jewel-like eyes, and determines to make them his at any cost. From that, itâs easy to assume the series is a trashy yaoi and write it off. That is the basic starting concept, and there is certainly a trashy yaoi element to this manga, but i donât think thatâs an accurate assessment of Gorgeous Carat as a whole. The story is much more complicated than that, and the story is far more important than the sex orfanservice. One thing that threw me was that the story is not actually about Rayâs activities as the phantom thief Noir. I was expecting something like CLAMPâs Man of Many Faces but less lighthearted, or Maurice Leblancâs short stories about ArsĂšne Lupin, which were a clear inspiration, but this wasnât that at all. After the first volume â really, after the first chapter or two â Ray didnât pull many heists. The story was actually about a rival crime organization, the Black Hand, which has chapters across much of the world. Florian encountered them more or less inadvertently and dragged Ray after him, but in the second volume we learn that thereâs actually a deeper tie to Ray, and the remainder of the story is about the villainâs obsession with him. It kind of feels like You Higuri wasnât sure what kind of a story she was telling and found herself dragged around by the narrative. As a writer myself, i can sympathize, but typically you can go back after the fact, clean it up, and make it look like that was what you were planning to write all along. Not being able to do that is one of the shortcomings of serialized storytelling, and Gorgeous Carat in particular suffered from it. Yes, this manga is dark. It has elements of human trafficking, physical and sexual abuse, drug addiction, and manipulation that may be hard for some people to read, and if youâre uncomfortable with those topics, i do not recommend you pick this series up. One thing i respect about the series is that You Higuri doesnât shy away from the negative impact these actions have, and doesnât romanticize them. Florian, who bears the brunt of the abuse, has trauma from it that doesnât magically go away as soon as the experience is over. The power dynamics definitely need to be addressed, since itâs a common problem in yaoi manga for one partner to be abusive, the other to meekly take it, and for that to be portrayed as a healthy relationship. At the beginning, Ray does start out that way. He does essentially buy Florian off his family, who have fallen on hard times. He does whip him in an attempt to gain information about a jewel he intends to steal from Florianâs family. But after the first or second chapter, Ray stops mistreating Florian, and the two of them are able to develop a much better relationship (still not ideal, mind), to the point where itâs believable that they might fall in love. They donât fall into bed with each other right away, as in so many trashy yaoi; in fact, they only kiss twice, in the fourth volume (iâm expecting more from the sequels). The main source of the darkness doesnât come from their interactions, but rather the villain Azuraâs obsession with Ray, and his using Florian in an attempt to get at Rayâs weak points. Again, this isnât presented as fanservice as another manga might have done, but a logical progression of a dark story. The supporting characters are also quite fleshed out. Iâm particularly fond of Laila, as itâs rare to see a complex female character in yaoi. Every phantom thief needs a detective nemesis hunting them down, and for Noir thatâs Solomon Sugar, who is kinda fun but not fully developed. Itâs hinted that he has more of his own stuff going on that connects to Ray and the villain Azura, so itâs possible Solomon will be more fleshed out in the sequels as well. Other characters such as Noel, Louise, Fatima, and so on all feel like people in their own right, with their own goals and motivations. Normally i talk about historical accuracy in my reviews, but iâm not familiar enough with the histories of early-20th-century France, northern Africa, or the Crusades to be able to judge that for this manga. Aside from one question that came up at the very beginning â why would Mughal rulers (who were Muslim, for those who donât know) embed their precious jewel into the forehead of a Hindu statue? â and then never came up again, there was nothing that raised any historical alarm bells for me. Thatâs the best i can do with this aspect. Gorgeous Carat is far from perfect; iâll be the first to acknowledge that. The plot got away from the author, and some of the darker elements can be read as in bad taste. In spite of that, though, i found Gorgeous Carat to be impossible to put down, a story that gets its hooks into you and wonât let go. I enjoyed it immensely. It was just as dark and complex as i like my fiction to be, and the male-male relations served the purpose of the story, not the story serving the purposes of yaoi fanservice. This is a great historical adventure story featuring queer characters, if thatâs the sort of thing youâre into.
The story is set in Paris of the early 20th century. Florian Rochefort is the only son of an impoverished aristorcratic family and becomes Ray Balzac Courland's collateral in exchange for the loan the pawnbroker pays to Florian's mother so she can amortize some of the family's depts. But in fact Ray is the infamous thief Noir who, having a special liking for extraordinary jewels, couldn't but claim Florian's outstanding amethyst eyes for his collection. As the story unfolds the reader follows the protagonists on their adventures in France, Morocco and Tunisia while their relationship deepens.