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Ai Yori Aoshi, Vol 1
Ai Yori Aoshi Vol 1
Author: Kou Fumizuki
On his way home from school one day, Kaoru Hanabishi runs into a young woman in traditional Japanese clothing. She is very lost, and he ends up helping her in her search to find someone. Having failed, the two retire to Kaoru's apartment, where they find out that he was the one she was looking for all along. Her name is Aoi Sakuraba and she has ...  more »
ISBN-13: 9781591826453
ISBN-10: 1591826454
Publication Date: 1/6/2004
Pages: 232
Rating:
  • Currently 4/5 Stars.
 27

4 stars, based on 27 ratings
Publisher: TokyoPop
Book Type: Paperback
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

midwinter avatar reviewed Ai Yori Aoshi, Vol 1 on + 75 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
From Publishers Weekly
Kaoru Hanabishi is a good-hearted college student who has severed ties to his super-rich family. One day on the subway, he runs into a gorgeous, easily confused young woman in traditional kimono and sandals. She turns out to be his childhood friend Aoi Sakuraba, who has been madly in love with him for her entire life and wants nothing but to marry him, worship at his feet, cook all his favorite foods, scrub his back, warm him with her naked body when he's cold, address him as formally as possible and so on. If Fumizuki's long-running manga romance (the title translates roughly as "True Blue Love") sounds a little bit like a Stepford Wives fantasy, well, it sometimes is. But there's a catch: Aoi is from a power family, too, and they strongly disapprove of her relationship with black-sheep Kaoru. This work is in danger of being a ridiculous sex farce, and Fumizuki plays Aoi's wide-eyed passion and Kaoru's guarded affection for all the comedy it's worth. But it's actually more a comedy of manners: the formality of old-money Japan contrasted with the informality of its modern culture. And Fumizuki has a real fondness for the whole cast-if the artwork is a little on the generic-manga side, the depth of characterization fleshes out Kaoru and Aoi considerably. Be forewarned: as in the immensely popular Love, Hina, there is a lot of overly-coy nudity, and most of the jokes revolve around Aoi's generous bosom.
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crystalsanders avatar reviewed Ai Yori Aoshi, Vol 1 on + 32 more book reviews
The story was good, didn't like the art too much.
reviewed Ai Yori Aoshi, Vol 1 on + 6 more book reviews
I liked this book. It has a similar situation of two young people thrown together as a couple like in Please Teacher. The series may get a little to graphic for my taistes, well just have to see. Beauty and inocence are a nice combination; beauty and corruption are not a nice combination, so I like this book because it has the first approach.


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Tagsmanga