GiriKoi, by YAMADA Daisy

> Manga > GiriKoi, by YAMADA Daisy
  • Title: GiriKoi
  • Author: YAMADA Daisy
  • Publisher (JP): Kodansha
  • Imprint: Kodansha Comics
  • Year: 2008
  • ISBN (JP): 978-4-06-364195-0
  • Licensed in North America?: No
  • Also Known As:
  • Publisher (US):
  • ISBN (US):
  • Anime Version? No
  • Live Action? No

This is another one of those series that I passed up several times at the bookstore before buying it. It always caught my eye, and I picked it up several times, but always ended up distracted by something else. Finally, I decided that I obviously really wanted it, since I kept coming back to it, so I broke down and bought it at last 😀 I am glad I did. Even though the cover (while very cute) looks sort of melancholy to me, the story itself is very funny and sweet. The art style is simple and attractive, and (can I say it yet again) CUTE! This cover is very eye-catching, and I like the way that the title looks like handwriting. This is volume 1 of what I hope will be a decently long series.

TOMINAGA Mao is a cute girl with long hair and a bright personality. She is just entering junior high, but she is at a school that none of her friends from elementary school are attending. So even though she is a fun girl, she is all alone in a new school, and feels a bit lonely. Well, that is, until she sees what looks like a bunch of upperclassmen boys picking on a freshman boy. Without thought, Mao rushes in to help, shouting at the older kids, and dragging the bullied boy away, saving him!

Or, maybe not. There is one slight problem here…. the boy, Riku, was not being bullied! Ooops…. everyone is very amused by Mao’s enthusiasm, and call her brave. Horribly embarrassed, she runs off to class, only to be greeted by a roomful of strangers who all seem to already have their own cliques. She feels like an outsider, and wonders how she will be able to make friends now.

She doesn’t have to wonder long, because before she knows it, Riku has shown up at her classroom looking for her. When he finds her, he proclaims her to be his “Prince!” and eagerly introduces her to the entire class! Riku doesn’t mind being the rescued “Princess” in this scenario. While extremely embarrassing, this act does manage to gain Mao some attention, and her new classmates are now interested in getting to know her. It seems that Riku is very popular, and he just provided Mao with a means of making friends!

As the days go by, Mao makes some friends in her class, and soon becomes good friends with Riku, too. Riku is her school’s soccer ace, and has a bunch of girls drooling over him (of course!) Mao likes Riku’s lively personality, and soon thinks she might be falling for him. However, he only seems to see her as a good friend, his “Prince” and doesn’t see her as a girl.

In fact, he might even have a girlfriend! Poor Mao has an unrequited love for Riku. Even worse, his girlfriend is cute and nice. Mao struggles to behave normally around Riku, but it is very difficult, especially because Riku, who is often kind of dense when it comes to girls, manages to have flashes of insight at inconvenient times. Will he ever realize how much Mao likes him?

Agghh the art in this is so adorable! I love Mao’s hair and her funny expressions. I look forward to reading volume 2!

6 thoughts on “GiriKoi, by YAMADA Daisy

  1. I wouldn’t mind getting this one for my sister! Seems like her style, and the cover art is very pretty to boot. Where do you usually buy your manga? Is there an online site that you’d recommend using more than others?

    1. Well, I am fortunate enough to live near a couple of Kinokuniya Japanese bookstore locations, so I usually buy my manga there. When I order online, I usually order import manga from BK1. It is a Japanese online bookstore. But even though the site is in Japanese, I think there are a few guides floating around on the net that have screencaps and instructions on how to buy from there, even if you don’t read Japanese. Here are some links to some sites that sell manga:
      http://niko-niko.net/shoujo/online-manga-stores/
      You can mail order from Kinokuniya.com also. Most of their site is in Japanese, but you can search using the ISBN number I have provided in my summary (remove the hyphens) and once you find the book, the checkout process is in English.
      Hope this helps!

      1. Do you live in Japan?

        Luckily, I can read Japanese with about 80-85% accuracy, so navigating the sites are never really an issue for me.

        I was always just a bit paranoid about ordering stuff from websites that I wasn’t familiar with.

        Anywho, thanks for the advice! Do you mind if I nudge you every blue moon (hardly ever, basically).

        1. Alas, no, I live in California. Considering my manga addiction is bad enough when I am around the two Kinokuniya stores we have here with their crazy-marked-up prices… if I lived in Japan, my collection would be insanely insanely insane ^_^ I have little control around cheap manga 🙂 As Japanese isn’t a problem for you, then I suggest BK1 (www.bk1.co.jp) I have ordered from them since 2001 or so.

  2. I just read boyfriend here in my deployment at Operation Iraqi Freedom. I love it so much. I dont konw how or what gave you this idea but it make me sad and some of my stress went away. I just want to say keep up the amazing work you are doing. And it amazing you can read japanese and understand that if i was like that I would buy anime in japanese instead looking or waiting to see if they ever going to make it in English. Also where can I buy the complete series so i can sent it home. I really love it so much. I want to share it with my furtrure kids when i have some. But in English of course I dont even have a 1st grader laugage as a japanese. please tell me where to buy them in english.

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