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Japanese manga series by Kazuhiko Shimamoto From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Aoi Honō (アオイホノオ, lit. "Blue Blazes") is a Japanese coming-of-age manga series written and illustrated by Kazuhiko Shimamoto. It was serialized in Shogakukan's seinen manga magazine Weekly Young Sunday from March 2007 to July 2008, when the magazine ceased its publication; a chapter was published in YS Special in October 2008, before being transferred to Shogakukan's then-brand-new shōnen manga magazine Monthly Shōnen Sunday in May 2009. Aoi Honō is a fictionalized account of Shimamoto's time as a student at the Osaka University of Arts, which he attended alongside Hideaki Anno, Hiroyuki Yamaga, and Takami Akai.[1]
Aoi Honō | |
アオイホノオ | |
---|---|
Genre | Coming-of-age[1] |
Manga | |
Written by | Kazuhiko Shimamoto |
Published by | Shogakukan |
Imprint | Shōnen Sunday Comics Special[a] |
Magazine |
|
Demographic | Seinen, shōnen |
Original run | March 8, 2007 – present |
Volumes | 28 |
Television drama | |
Blue Fire | |
Directed by | Yuichi Fukuda |
Produced by | Junpei Nakagawa |
Written by | Yuichi Fukuda |
Music by | Eishi Segawa |
Studio | TV Tokyo |
Original network | TV Tokyo |
Original run | July 19, 2014 – September 27, 2014 |
Episodes | 11 |
It was adapted into a live-action Japanese television drama, titled Blue Fire in English,[2] that aired from July to October 2014.[3] The drama was streamed on Viki with English subtitles.[4] The real Takami Akai and Hiroyuki Yamaga make cameos in the television series: Akai plays a bathhouse manager in episode 10, while Yamaga plays the bartender at a restaurant where his counterpart passes out (which, according to Yamaga, is based on an actual incident) in episode 7.[5]
Aoi Honō is written and illustrated by Kazuhiko Shimamoto. The manga debuted in Shogakukan's seinen manga magazine Weekly Young Sunday on March 8, 2007.[6] After the magazine ceased publication on July 31, 2008,[7] a chapter of Aoi Honō was published the Big Comic Spirits special supplementary issue YS Special in October 2008.[8] The series was then transferred to the brand new shōnen manga magazine Monthly Shōnen Sunday on May 12, 2009.[9] Shogakukan has collected its chapters into individual tankōbon volumes. The first volume was released on February 5, 2008.[10] As of July 11, 2024, 30 volumes have been released.[11]
Volume 2 sold 24,521 copies by May 17, 2009,[43] volume 9 sold 20,415 copies by November 18, 2012,[44] and volume 10 sold 17,068 copies by June 16, 2013.[45]
Aoi Honō was one of the Jury Recommended Works in the Story Manga division at the 13th Japan Media Arts Festival Awards in 2009.[46] In 2010, the manga received 23 points in the 3rd Manga Taishō, placing last among the ten nominees.[47] The manga received Excellence Award of the Manga Division at the 18th Japan Media Arts Festival Awards in 2014.[48][49] In 2015, along with Asahinagu, it won the 60th Shogakukan Manga Award in the General category.[50] In February 2015, Asahi Shimbun announced that Aoi Honō was one of nine nominees for the nineteenth annual Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize.[51]
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