For more information and previews of each book (or to order them individually), click the titles below.
Wandering Son Vol. 1
The fifth grade. The threshold to puberty, and the beginning of the end of childhood innocence. Shuichi Nitori and his new friend Yoshino Takatsuki have happy homes, loving families, and are well-liked by their classmates. But they share a secret that further complicates a time of life that is awkward for anyone: Shuichi is a boy who wants to be a girl, and Yoshino is a girl who wants to be a boy. Written and drawn by one of today’s most critically acclaimed creators of manga, Shimura portrays Shuishi and Yoshino’s very private journey with affection, sensitivity, gentle humor, and unmistakable flair and grace. Volume one introduces our two protagonists and the friends and family whose lives intersect with their own. Yoshino is rudely reminded of her sex by immature boys whose budding interest in girls takes clumsily cruel forms. Shuichi’s secret is discovered by Saori, a perceptive and eccentric classmate. And it is Saori who suggests that the fifth graders put on a production of The Rose of Versailles for the farewell ceremony for the sixth graders — with boys playing the roles of women, and girls playing the roles of men.
Wandering Son is a sophisticated work of literary manga translated with rare skill and sensitivity by veteran translator and comics scholar Matt Thorn.
Wandering Son Vol. 2
In the second volume of Shimura Takako's superb coming-of-age story, our
transgendered protagonists, Shuichi and Yoshino, have entered the sixth grade.
Shuichi spends a precious gift of cash from his grandmother on a special present for himself, a purchase that triggers a chain of events in which his sister
Maho learns his secret, and Shuichi inadvertently steals the heart of a boy
Maho in interested in.
The “woman” who showed so much interest in Yoshino (when she was wear-
ing a boy’s school uniform) in Volume One reappears with “her” boyfriend, and becomes a mentor and friend to the two
children. And the kids go on a class trip that is a rite of passage Shuichi would rather pass up. Shuichi is called a “faggot”
by another boy, and the dramatic nature in which Saori comes to Shuichi’s defense leads the two to discover a shared
fondness for Anne of Green Gables. But despite his propensity to cry (a propensity noted repeatedly by his more outgoing
sister), Shuichi finds strength and courage he didn’t know he had.
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