Bento Bako Bonus: Wolf God vol. 1

Title: Wolf God (KamiinuxBlood)
Author: Ai Tenkawa
Publisher: Digital Manga Publishing (Doki Doki)
Volume: Volume 1 (ongoing), $12.95
Vintage: 2007 by Shinshokan, July 2010 by DMP
Genre: Fantasy, supernatural, romance (shoujo)

Kyounosuke Shirogami, part of a Japanese clan descended from wolves, is sent out into the world to look for his brother Kokuyou. Kokuyou is the alpha, the heir to the family, but has been missing for many years. With the current family head at death’s door, Kyounosuke follows his brother’s scent to Tokyo, where he meets a high school girl named Koyuki. He followed his brother’s scent to her, but Koyuki doesn’t know his brother. However, her older brother recognizes the name, and reveals that he went to college with Kokuyou, but that he had heard his friend had died. Shocked, Kyounosuke breaks into tears, and then collapses from a fever. The city air is interfering with his wolf senses and making him sick. Koyuki insists he stay at her house so she can take care of him, and her brother comes home from the hospital where he works to gives Kyounosuke fever medication. When Kyounosuke and Koyuki go to visit Kokuyou’s grave nearby, the remains beneath the dirt fail to resonate with Kokuyou’s whistle his little brother has been carrying. Each member of their family has a whistle that is bound to them and their divine spirit beast(s) that protect them. This convinces Kyounosuke that his older brother is still alive somewhere. (He gives his own whistle to Koyuki, to summon him to her side if she is ever in danger.) His hope is shaken, however, when Koyuki’s brother, Mitsuru, hands over the last thing Kokuyou gave him – a small black ball, the soul of a divine beast. Koyuki cheers him up by encouraging him not to give up and offering to help him search for his brother. Things are going smoothly, aside from Kyounosuke’s illness, until a branch family member shows up to pick a fight. Kanosuke hates Kyounosuke and is jealous of the attention he gets for being next in line to be alpha. Koyuki and Kyounosuke’s retainer Hata stop the fight, but not before the boy is severely injured. Enter the pint sized sorceress Matsunojou, who heals him and then sends Koyuki away…who then promptly gets kidnapped by Kanosuke. Kyounosuke rushes to her rescue, without his full powers, and Koyuki sees a new side to her courageous friend, and also learns some unsettling things about Shirogami family. Koyuki’s life will never be the same! Her days of boring normality are over, but is she ready for what’s in store?

Kyounosuke explains his situation to Koyuki. I adore the way Tenkawa draws the chibi characters in the book.

This one is definitely cute, and it’s nice to see DMP branch out beyond yaoi again and publish some traditional shoujo. Kyounosuke is adorable, and his courage and loyalty (which, not coincidentally, are strong dog traits) makes him a good lead. There’s no obvious villain for him to fight against yet, but I expect one is forthcoming. Someone clearly attacked his brother Kokuyou and destroyed his divine beast, so there’s someone out there to track down and make a later appearance. Koyuki has no dreams for herself, no goals or ambitions. But when she meets Kyounosuke, a new world opens up before her. She’s a little on the generic side as far as heroines go, but she’s cute, sweet, and stands up for herself. She does have a strange vision during a heated battle between Kyounosuke and Kanousuke, which seems to point to some traumatic event in her past that she has blocked out. Clearly there’s going to be a romance between the two leads, and it’s already starting to form. I am rather weirded out by the borderline bestiality here. Kou (one of the divine beasts) comes right out and says the clan came about from the union of a wolf and human…however that happened. There’s at least one character so far (who may be a divine beast, but I’m not positive) who can transform from human to dog to furry (human with dog ears and tail), though Kyounosuke says he does not have such abilities himself. The names in this book get confusing. Many of the cast have similarly spelled names, and a couple of them are tongue twisters to boot. The names are a little hard to keep straight, but at least the character designs are distinctive. The art is cute, if simple, and my only real complaint is the way the ears are drawn. I’m not a big fan of the style used, the big ears with dark shadows. The chibi style (often used for comedic effect) is simply adorable. The rating on this is an accurate 13+, so it’s great for young teens.

Kris
kristin@comicattack.net
@girlg33k_Kris

Review copy provided by Digital Manga Publishing.