Pending Plays > Comics & Graphic Novels > A vampire in the bathhouse – Manga Review

A vampire in the bathhouse – Manga Review

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3 stars because non-consent. Anyone who’s been following my reviews, knows how much I despise that trope. Worse, when it’s used as comedy. 

Non-consent may work sometimes for certain characters, but not when it involves sexual-like activities AND the non-consenting person clearly is uncomfortable (+ has done nothing to deserve it). Which was the case here. 

Could’ve rated it 5 stars without it, because everything else is really good. Unfortunately, the sexual harassment was used as a running gag in each chapter, one time he was even forced to have sex; while he may have agreed to it, for once, he pretty much had no real choice. (Positive Spoiler: they manage to resolve it without sex.) 


The art is great, the characters are (aside from the non-consent) fun to follow around and I loved the slice of life. The latter makes it seem like it’s very slow-paced, showing ‘boring’ day tasks like cooking, cleaning, shopping etc. (which I’m a fan of). On the other hand, everything is resolved very quickly and jumps from one adventure to the next. 

I would’ve wished to see more of Ume and Pequeño (cool name btw). They were such a cute duo and so much more interesting to read than the grown-ups. 

The characters Ume (a young boy with black hair) and Pequeno (a chibi demon with bat wings) are seen in the middle of the picture, eating cotton candy and blushing. 

Text bubbles from right to left: "This is so yummy, Ume! I like cotton candy, too!", "really?", "I wanna sleep on a cotton candy bed!", "A cotton candy bed...!"

Although grandpa was really sweet too, for his few appearances. 

The older youngsters were mostly annoying though; they’re (short) dramas were meant to be funny but not for me. Such basic, on a low level, humor that is nothing new and really could’ve been better. 


Queer casualty but no queer plot

Luka mentions that demons don’t bother with gender roles or differences, also when it comes to sex or romance etc. It may be new for Sakura, who’s a human and interprets it as BL, the tropes are also very commonly Yaoi, but it isn’t really BL. Not that I minded though; I’m glad it focused on the daily life and the non-consent was just a (useless) side remark, so the book does end up having at least some charm. 

There might’ve been a drag queen or trans person as a side character. I’m not sure cause they didn’t use a label, but it’s cool either way. Men being or looking feminine is normal here. (However, it still pulls a lot of heteronormative tropes, such as a photo shooting where they’re dressed up as a husband & wife for a wedding theme.) 

CriteriaScoresOur Score
Art1-55
Pacing1-53
Characters1-53
Writing Style1-54
Originality1-52

Thank you to Kodansha on Netgalley for providing an eARC. The english translation was released on April 29, 2025. (The japanese original (銭湯とヴァンパイア) came out in 2022.)


Finished reading: 6th April 2025
~Arden Skye

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