Kaiju Girl Caramelise

Kaiju Girl Caramelise (Japanese: 乙女怪獣キャラメリゼ, Hepburn: Otome Kaijū Kyaramerize) is a seinen manga series by Spica Aoki.[lower-alpha 1] The plot centers around a student named Kuroe Akaishi who suffers from a mysterious illness, and how it may impact her newfound love interest. Kaiju Girl Caramelise appeared as a serial in the monthly manga magazine Monthly Comic Alive starting in early 2018. Kadokawa Shoten has published the chapters in three bound volumes as of October 2019. American publishing company Yen Press licensed the series for an English-language translation in North America. Two of these volumes have been released so far. Reception of the first translated volume has been positive, with reviewers calling the series "enjoyable".

Kaiju Girl Caramelise
Cover of Kaiju Girl Caramelise (English version) showing Kuroe Akaishi
乙女怪獣キャラメリゼ
(Otome Kaijū Kyaramerize)
GenreRomantic comedy, science fiction[1][2]
Manga
Written bySpica Aoki
Published byKadokawa Shoten
English publisher
ImprintMF Comics Alive Series
MagazineMonthly Comic Alive
DemographicSeinen[lower-alpha 1]
Volumes3

Plot

Kuroe Akaishi is described as "Psyco-tan" by her classmates and is an outcast at school. She suffers from a rare, incurable illness that causes deformations in her body at random times. She is surprised one day to find that Arata Minami, a popular guy in her class, starts to pay attention to her and questions the weird new feelings she has around him. It isn't long before her mother confesses to Kuroe that she is in fact a kaiju, which confirmed a realistic "dream" the prior night that involved her monster form rampaging through Tokyo. Kuroe struggles and is dismissive of the information, and worries that Arata will not accept her for what she is (both human and monster form).

Characters

Kuroe Akaishi (赤石 黒絵)
The protagonist of the story, Kuroe has been suffering from a mysterious illness for at least sixteen years that causes abnormal body growth and disfigurement. This has led Kuroe to become an outcast feeling that nobody could accept someone like her.[5] She has a pet dog named "Jumbo King".[6]
Arata Minami (南 新汰)
Arata is a popular guy in Kuroe's school who starts getting model offerings. He takes interest in Kuroe, revealing that he too wants to be out of the spotlight, and lost a lot of weight to become the person he is known as. This quickly irritates the other jealous school girls crushing on him who cannot understand what he sees in Kuroe.
Yuriko Akaishi (赤石 凜子)
Kuroe's devoted mother, Arata is shown to be there for her daughter against judgmental people knowing full well that she is a Kaiju. She is a big fan of the singer Ayumi Hamasaki.[6]

Release

Kaiju Girl Caramelise was first serialized in the monthly seinen magazine Monthly Comic Alive in February 2018, and later compiled into volumes. Spica Aoki had previous works serialized in magazines aimed towards girls (shōjo), so she was worried when a male-targeted (seinen) magazine picked up her series. Aoki thought she would have to make the series aimed more towards guys until her editors advised her that "this story really works best as shōjo" even though it was in a seinen magazine.[3] The first volume was published by Kadokawa Shoten on June 23, 2018, three bound volumes have so far been published by the company.[7][8] On November 18, 2018, North American publisher Yen Press announced at Anime NYC that they had licensed the series.[7] The first English Language volume was released on June 25, 2019, with announced future dates for the other volumes.[1]

Volume Japanese release date Japanese ISBN English release date English ISBN
1 June 23, 2018[4] ISBN 978-4-0406-9914-1 June 25, 2019[1] ISBN 978-1-9753-5705-4
2 January 23, 2019[9] ISBN 978-4-0406-5249-8 November 19, 2019[10] ISBN 978-1-9753-5946-1
3 August 23, 2019[8] ISBN 978-4-0406-5802-5 April 21, 2020 ISBN 978-1-9753-0860-5

Reception

The English-language adaptation of Kaiju Girl Caramelise has received positive ratings: Rebecca Silverman from Anime News Network gave the first volume an overall "B+" rating, saying that the story works on "both metaphoric and literal levels". While Silverman also praised the "fun" art, she was critical of a few confusing pages and two of the characters. She called the volume overall an "enjoyable blend of adolescent metaphor".[2] Sean Gaffney from "A Case Suitable for Treatment" called the first volume a "lot of fun", saying that the main character is intelligent and likeable. Gaffney goes on to say that he hoped the series would not go towards a "yuri" direction based on one of the character's actions, and that the series as a whole was fairly lighthearted, and "sweet in its own way".[3] Brigid Alverson included the manga in a "Best of June 2019" grouping saying that the story is about a teen romance that "runs far, far off the rails".[11]

Notes

  1. The demographic of a manga series is generally determined by the demographic of its magazine of publication. This particular series is noteworthy for being called a "shōjo" by the manga author and editors, and labeled as a shōnen manga by Kadokawa's website.[3][4]

References

  1. "Kaiju Girl Caramelise, Vol. 1". Yen Press. Retrieved October 8, 2019.
  2. Silverman, Rebecca (June 22, 2019). "Kaiju Girl Caramelise GN 1". Anime News Network. Retrieved October 7, 2019.
  3. Gaffney, Sean (June 25, 2019). "Kaiju Girl Caramelise, Vol. 1". A Case Suitable for Treatment. Retrieved October 7, 2019.
  4. "Kaiju Girl Caramelise, Vol. 1" (in Japanese). Kadokawa Store. Retrieved October 7, 2019.
  5. Aoki, Spica. Kaiju Girl Caramelise Volume 1. p. 12-14.
  6. "Character". Comic Alive. Retrieved October 10, 2019.
  7. Ressler, Karen (November 17, 2019). "Yen Press Licenses 7 New Manga, 6 New Light Novels". Anime News Network. Retrieved October 7, 2019.
  8. "乙女怪獣キャラメリゼ 3". Kadokawa Shoten (in Japanese). Retrieved October 7, 2019.
  9. "乙女怪獣キャラメリゼ 2". Kadokawa Shoten (in Japanese). Retrieved October 8, 2019.
  10. "Kaiju Girl Caramelise, Vol. 2". Yen Press. Retrieved June 3, 2020.
  11. Brigid Alverson (June 3, 2019). "Best New Manga of June 2019". Barnes & Noble. Retrieved October 10, 2019.
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