Natsume Yuujinchou

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Des alternatives: Synonyms: Natsume Yuujinchou Novel, The Mysterious Story of Lamp Hall, The Ayakashi's Tune, The Ayakashi's Dream Road, Natsume Yuujinchou: Kogitsune no Tabi
Japanese: 小説・夏目友人帳
Auteur: Midorikawa, Yuki
Taper: Manga
Statut: Publishing
Publier: 2013-01-04 to ?

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4.6
(5 Votes)
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Des alternatives: Synonyms: Natsume Yuujinchou Novel, The Mysterious Story of Lamp Hall, The Ayakashi's Tune, The Ayakashi's Dream Road, Natsume Yuujinchou: Kogitsune no Tabi
Japanese: 小説・夏目友人帳
Auteur: Midorikawa, Yuki
Taper: Manga
Statut: Publishing
Publier: 2013-01-04 to ?
But
4.6
5 Votes
80.00%
0.00%
20.00%
0.00%
0.00%
0 En train de lire
0 Veux lire
0 Lis
Sommaire
Collection of short stories.
Mots clés
shoujo
supernatural
Commentaires (5)
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Natsume Yuujinchou review
par
Ginorin9
Apr 15, 2021
Reading Natsume Yuujinchou feels like crossing into a mushroom circle. There's magic and mystery, and charm in the natural feel. The story has been going on for about eighteen years now, and it's nice seeing how themes and details will build on each other in small ways. If you love slice of life, especially the kind that makes you feel like your sitting in a forest on a sunny day, enjoying time as it passes, this is a great manga! It's also fun because it dances amongst many different feelings. It balances light comedy with darker moods, energetic scenes and calming scenery.

Oh! And I love the watercolor style covers that are being released recently. Although the story is about spirits, it also follows human elements, especially its reoccuring theme of loneliness.

And it's odd, but I love learning about the mysterious Reiko. She isn't really a main character, and she is really more like a memory in the story, yet she is so intruiging.

Yeah I don't know. I've read a lot of manga over the years. As time has gone on, I read less and less. There are very few I still keep up with. Something about Natsume Yuujinchou keeps me coming back. It's not like the plot is especially compelling. It's the opposite! It's very episodic. But, maybe its because its a comforting manga, something consistent and warm. I'll leave for six months and come back to binge it. Yeah, I think comforting is the right word. That's my favorite part of the slice-of-life genre. It's comforting in a peaceful sort of way. Natsume Yuujinchou has its silly and dramatic moments too, but overall, its a soothing story. I'm really grateful it exists. I read it and I feel like I belong somewhere.
Natsume Yuujinchou review
par
MangoPamda5
Apr 15, 2021
Why is there no review?

I really enjoy the story of Natsume. It is, I guess, a supernatural slice of life. It has a gentle feel, and it manages to tweak on all the emotions - I laugh, I cry, I sigh, I feel angry, and through it all, I enjoy the story. There are underlying themes of loneliness, but ultimately, I feel that is about finding your place in the world.

Our protagonist, Natsume, can see spirits (yokai). This has been a bane in his life, as when he was young people thought he was a liar. This wasn't helped by the fact that he moved from relative to relative, as his parents were dead. His past is told in flashbacks (often through dreams after meeting various yokai) and the story is based at his most permanent home, to date.

The story is gentle and episodic - the different yokai he meets, the returning of the names. Although I have just completed volume 9, and it is starting to get a little more tense, and there seems to be a much longer story arc involving some exorcists.

The art quite beautiful, and very suitable to (generally) gentle nature of the story. The very different spirits are quite wonderful - some tiny, some giant, some shadows.. beauitful.

I find the characters quite exceptional! Natsume especially draws you in, but each character has a story to tell. There are a number of recurring minor characters (a few school friends, more yokai. And it is interesting to see how the main side characters change as Natsume changes). Natsume himself is a typical sort of boy, with the exception that he sees spirits. It is quite nice having a story where the teenage protaginist. His sensei, a yokai, is comic relief in many ways. But it is wonderful seeing how these two jounrey together, and change as they experience more.

I reccomend this manga whole heartedly!
Natsume Yuujinchou review
par
hexashadow1313
Apr 15, 2021
Natsume Yuujinchou - the poor man's Mushishi.

On a paper, the concept looks good. Youkai are great source of inspiration for a story - their variations can lend to a distinct feel and even their most basic form appeal as something unusual to a western reader. Sadly, it's something you can keep milking only for so long if you don't improve the staleness of the story itself. Yes, the main weakness of Natsume Yuujinchou is that it's going on for way too damn long without much change of variety. Yes, it is episodical, but unlike the forementioned Mushishi that is still highly creative with it's variations of the self-contained stories and which produces a sense of emergency and danger for the characters, Natsume is just... too mild. The only thing that changes is the design of youkai, otherwise most of the arcs are "Hey it's me ya boi youkai of the week, I will now bother you for a while in relation to your grandma until we come to agreement". I hardly ever felt any of the characters were in a real danger as the series seems to love it's status quo. Thanks to the protagonist being anchored in one place instead of travelling around, it is harder for the small arcs to end more drastically for the secondary characters as that would change the setting around the protagonist noticeably, which is something this manga is not exactly willing to do.

The plot is repetitive to a point that I would even call it boring. And as a larger problem, it feels like it's just backtracking a non-existent prequel of the past adventures. I would rather read a manga about Reiko and the start of all those stories than the clean-up after them. Most of the cast is forgettable and the only reason the protagonist and the cat aren't is because of the count of their appearance, but they too don't offer much of engaging character traits. The art is not bad for a shoujo and as mentioned I like the youkai designs which are the best part of this manga.

If you want an episodical work with youkai central to the plot, go watch/read Gegege no Kitaro instead. It's actually more fun and more creative.
Natsume Yuujinchou review
par
Snowkittenz2
Apr 15, 2021
Pleasantly spurred on by the recent reviews and attention this beautiful work has received, I thought I perhaps could toss my hat into the ring and speak a little about Natsume Yuujinchou. Stunning in it's simplicity, meaningful in it's message, this is a manga that I believe always could use a little more love.


At it's heart, Natsume Yuujinchou presents a rather simple story depicting the day to day life of Takashi Natsume, orphan and loner from a very young age. In almost every way, Natsume is a normal fifteen year old child, shy and somewhat cut off from the people around him. The one thing that sets Natsume apart (and the thing that caused him much stress in his earlier years), is his inheritance from his grandmother Reiko. An inheritance of a beautiful face, a strange book, and the ability to see and communicate with youkai. It is this ability that has led to him being deemed strange and odd by most people, shunned for the weird tales he tells.


But as he grows and meets more people he wants to protect, Natsume must work to discover a way to balance the world of humans in which he belongs, and the world of youkai in which he is a part of regardless of his desires. Both of these worlds and the denizens that fill them come to hold meaning to Natsume, and many of the important lessons in the story are derived from him protecting them... often from each other.

The second, and probably most important, aspect of the story is the titular Book of Friends given to Natsume by his powerfully gifted grandmother. In this book are the names of numerous youkai bound to contract by Reiko's power to be summoned at any time. Natsume has no need for youkai armies and gladly returns names (and independence) to those who ask. Of course, some prefer to take rather then ask, putting Natsume in a great deal of danger. Luckily, he stumbles across some help in the form of Madara.

Madara is a youkai hidden in the form of a lucky cat, and visible to humans only in this form. He agrees to protect Natsume from the other youkai claiming he is only doing so, so he can obtain the book once Natsume dies. What starts out as merely a job blossoms into a humorous caring relationship between the two. Madara bickers, he snarks, he provides much of the comedic relief, but at his core he desires to protect Natsume and he does so without hesitation.

Together with Madara, Natsume struggles through issues we all can relate to. Finding his place in the world, protecting all those dear to him, no matter what they look like or where they come from. He works tirelessly in his quest to understand that which is different and frightening. His is the journey of life, and while his circumstances are different, the core values of respect, understanding, kindness, and love are ones we can all apply to our daily lives.


The main twosome of Natsume and Madara make up a fair chunk of the character interaction, but numerous humans and youkai add to the supporting cast. Exorcists such as Natori and Matoba with their rationality and coldness towards youkai, provide as excellent foils towards Natsume's idealistic optimism that the two worlds can coexist, and then there of course is his mysterious yet incredibly strong grandmother Reiko, shown in her youkai wrangling youth through flashback. Youkai such as Hiiragi and Chobi-Hige provide a nice insight to kinder more rational youkai, showing that though they are different from humans they are not all monsters. They all add splendidly to the story with their own viewpoints and tales to be told.


The art of Natsume Yuujinchou is pleasing yet simple. Human characters are drawn quite realistically, devoid of huge eyes and anime hair. The youkai, as is true in every good supernatural story with spirits and demons, are completely unique in their designs. From a tiny spider youkai to the great beast dragon Madara they are all quite a treat to look at. Madara in his lucky cat form is the most cartoonish aspect of the art, and he's quite adorable and very funny. Backgrounds are drawn simply yet effectively. The usual forest scenery is done in nice yet sparing detail.


Natsume Yuujinchou as a manga has fallen prey to what I've recently dubbed "The Aria Effect" in which an anime adaptation is done so splendidly that the equally wonderful manga tends to be overlooked. This isn't necessarily a bad thing, as lord knows we could use more quality adaptations such as those of the Aria series, and Natsume Yuujinchou. But there is something to be said about the source material and the even more soothing feeling it brings to your heart.

Natsume Yuujinchou is a spectacular manga that shouldn't be missed whether you've seen the anime or not.