This is a love story about Ogawa Manami, a high school teacher who grew up in a strict family, and Kaworu, a host who is not good at reading and writing, as they search for love despite the obstacles they face. Manami is being pressured to marry a man she met through her father's introduction, and the high school where she works is also facing a crisis of class collapse. She spends her days lamenting, "I want to run away from this place." One day, she receives a call saying that a student has been deceived by an unscrupulous host, and she rushes to the store to bring the female student back, where she meets Kaworu. Kaworu has to sign a promissory note promising not to contact the student in the future, and Manami finds out about the problem that he had kept secret from anyone until then. In the play, the two gradually become closer through Manami's secret "private lessons," in which she teaches Kaworu about language and society.
If you loved the quiet heartbreak and “right person, wrong timing” feeling of Unmei ni, Nita Koi, then you should definitely watch In Your Radiant Season.
Both dramas carry the same emotional atmosphere:
? a fated kind of love
? healing through pain and loss
? mature romance with emotional depth
? bittersweet timing that makes the story ache in the best way
What makes them feel so similar is how both stories focus less on dramatic twists and more on human connection — the kind that slowly changes a person’s life forever. The male leads in both dramas also share that calm, warm, quietly devoted energy that makes every small gesture emotional.
If you enjoyed:
* soft cinematography
* emotionally heavy dialogue
* slow-burn romance
* themes of destiny and second chances
* crying at 2AM over beautifully written love stories
…then these two dramas belong in the same recommendation list.
“Some people enter your life not to stay forever, but to change your season completely.” ??
Both dramas carry the same emotional atmosphere:
? a fated kind of love
? healing through pain and loss
? mature romance with emotional depth
? bittersweet timing that makes the story ache in the best way
What makes them feel so similar is how both stories focus less on dramatic twists and more on human connection — the kind that slowly changes a person’s life forever. The male leads in both dramas also share that calm, warm, quietly devoted energy that makes every small gesture emotional.
If you enjoyed:
* soft cinematography
* emotionally heavy dialogue
* slow-burn romance
* themes of destiny and second chances
* crying at 2AM over beautifully written love stories
…then these two dramas belong in the same recommendation list.
“Some people enter your life not to stay forever, but to change your season completely.” ??
Saito looks great here
It's romantic, but riddled with the heartwringing conflict that makes you yearn for a happy ending (I hope we get one). The actress playing the romantic female lead (the destined one) is very good.
the story is about Kasumi (Tomoyo Harada) is divorced and lives with her high school student aged son. She supports her family by delivering laundry. One day, she meets Yuri (Takumi Saito). Yuri is a customer of the laundry delivery service. He is a popular designer, known for his designs of cafes and furniture. Yuri talks to Kasumi without restraint. At first, Kasumi is cautious around him, but she becomes attracted to him.
It's romantic, but riddled with the heartwringing conflict that makes you yearn for a happy ending (I hope we get one). The actress playing the romantic female lead (the destined one) is very good.
the story is about Kasumi (Tomoyo Harada) is divorced and lives with her high school student aged son. She supports her family by delivering laundry. One day, she meets Yuri (Takumi Saito). Yuri is a customer of the laundry delivery service. He is a popular designer, known for his designs of cafes and furniture. Yuri talks to Kasumi without restraint. At first, Kasumi is cautious around him, but she becomes attracted to him.



