Unusual for shoujo, interesting but very unpolished (or is it the translation) ; no surprise tho if mu is to be believed: she was about 16 when serialization started.
...skimming through her portfolio makes me want to draw a very careful comparison with Ikebe Aoi: it's all about girls here, and it's their daily lives, problems, worries and relationships with each other that are explored* in her works. "Men" (boys) presence is always acknowledged, but largely inconsequential, and the best treatment a male character in Yuzuhara Mizuka manga can hope for is to serve as extremely underdeveloped love interest (likely an editorial demand), plot device (sometimes in conjecture with the previous role), or simple background noise. Romances are practically non existent and are presented as possibility rather than any sort of realized actuality, as they're not her primary (or even tertiary) concern. I wonder what kind of thing she'd create if she'll ever decide to sail outside of borders of the cozy preadolescent shoujo magazines world.
Overall it's very different kind of reading, at least among titles which had made it to the west, in one form or the other.
*adjust for the genre and demographics