

Kokoro Connect, for example, addresses personality and identity crises, troubled family relationships, correspondence and past or current relationships.

As if this were not enough, these internal problems, in general, represent important parallels with the common problems in adolescence and puberty. Both take place in a school reality in which the characters involved, mostly, present personal dramas that are solved with the progression of the narrative.

Since the genres of these works are almost identical, there is little surprise in this recommendation.
