What I meant, more, was that within itself it showed the progression of time and events better than the manga shows with its own timeline. (I hope that was clearer?)
Ah, yes, that makes good sense. The manga relies so heavily on cues that are probably instantly obvious to Japanese readers that it can get pretty frustrating.
The Yuki-Tohru-Kyo dynamic is my favorite part of the anime. ^_^ I adore it, and I do love the way the manga eventually starts to have a similar feel. (Yuki reacting to Kyo and Tohru in vol. 19 is priceless. I don't have anything to add to your vol. 19 post, other than "yay!" and "eek, Shigure". Shigure fascinates me, but I have deep anger issues with him because of Rin, largely on account of the way I interpret him in conjunction with vol. 18. Which almost no one else agrees with. ^^)
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Ah, yes, that makes good sense. The manga relies so heavily on cues that are probably instantly obvious to Japanese readers that it can get pretty frustrating.
The Yuki-Tohru-Kyo dynamic is my favorite part of the anime. ^_^ I adore it, and I do love the way the manga eventually starts to have a similar feel. (Yuki reacting to Kyo and Tohru in vol. 19 is priceless. I don't have anything to add to your vol. 19 post, other than "yay!" and "eek, Shigure". Shigure fascinates me, but I have deep anger issues with him because of Rin, largely on account of the way I interpret him in conjunction with vol. 18. Which almost no one else agrees with. ^^)