Japanese manga series by Kaoru Mori From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A Bride's Story (Japanese: 乙嫁語り, Hepburn: Otoyomegatari) is a Japanese historical romance manga series written and illustrated by Kaoru Mori. It was first serialized in Enterbrain's Harta (formerly known as Fellows!) magazine from October 2008 to November 2020, after which it transferred to Kadokawa's Aokishi magazine in June 2021. Its serial chapters have been collected into fifteen bound volumes as of November 2024. Yen Press licensed the series for an English-language release in North America. As of January 2025, fourteen volumes have been published in English.
A Bride's Story | |
乙嫁語り (Otoyomegatari) | |
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Genre | |
Manga | |
Written by | Kaoru Mori |
Published by |
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English publisher | |
Magazine |
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Demographic | Seinen |
Original run | 14 October 2008 – present |
Volumes | 15 |
A Bride's Story won the Prix Intergénérations ("Intergenerational Award") at the Angoulême International Comics Festival in 2012, as well as the 7th Manga Taishō Award in 2014.
Set in a rural town near the Caspian Sea during the Russian conquest of Central Asia in the late 19th century, A Bride's Story revolves around a young woman, Amir, who travels from a distant village across the mountains to marry Karluk, a young man eight years her junior. The series follows their relationship as it develops, while introducing storylines about other young women and their daily lives with their respective fiancés and husbands along the Silk Road, and their struggle to keep on their livinghood amidst the advance of the Russian Empire's army.
This section may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience. (July 2017) |
The Eihon family descended from nomads, but have lived in a village for several generations. The family is largely patrilocal, but Yusuf, a son-in-law, married into the family.
The family Amira was born into. They are nomadic during the summer. Introduced in chapter 4.
A nomadic clan of the steppe, who agree to join an alliance of steppe clans and town dwellers against the Russian encroachment. They are introduced in chapter 96.
A Bride's Story is written and illustrated by Kaoru Mori. It was first serialized in Enterbrain's seinen manga magazine Harta (formerly known as Fellows!) from 14 October 2008[2][3] to 13 November 2020.[4] It transferred to Kadokawa's manga magazine Aokishi on 18 June 2021.[5][6][7] The series' chapters have been collected into fifteen tankōbon volumes by Kadokawa as of 20 November 2024.[8] The first nine volumes were published under Enterbrain's Beam Comix imprint;[9][10] subsequent volumes have been published under Kadokawa's Harta Comix imprint.[11][12] In addition to the tankōbon release, a wide-ban collector's edition of the manga has been issued by Kadokawa since 20 August 2021. The wide-ban features large pages, high-quality paper, fold-out color illustrations, and special boxes to store each volume in.[13][14] A Bride's Story is also available in digital e-book format in Japan.[15][16]
Yen Press licensed the series for an English-language release in North America.[17] The first volume was published on 31 May 2011; the fourteenth and most recent volume was published on 19 September 2023[18][19] The series received a digital release starting on 25 September 2018.[1]
A Bride's Story is also licensed for regional language releases by Ki-oon in France,[20] Tokyopop Germany in Germany,[21] J-Pop Manga in Italy,[22] Norma Editorial in Spain,[23] Studio JG in Poland,[24] Punainen jättiläinen in Finland,[25] Level Comics in Indonesia,[26] Daewon C.I. in Korea,[27] Kadokawa Taiwan in Taiwan,[28] Siam Inter Comics in Thailand,[29] and IPM in Vietnam.[30]
A Bride's Story won the Manga Taishō Award in 2014.[31][32] It was previously nominated for the award in 2011 and 2013.[33][34] The series also won the Prix Intergénérations ("Intergenerational Award") at France's Angoulême International Comics Festival in 2012.[35][36] It was nominated for an Eisner Award in 2012 and 2016.[37][38] The American Library Association's YALSA division included the first volume on its list of Great Graphic Novels For Teens in 2012.[39][40]
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