The Other Side of Secret

The Other Side of Secret

The cover of the first volume.
シークレットの向こう側
(Shīkuretto no Mukōgawa)
Genre Fantasy, Action[1]
Manga
Written by Hideaki Yoshikawa
Published by Media Factory
English publisher
Demographic Seinen
Magazine Monthly Comic Alive
Original run 27 September 201427 October 2015
Volumes 4

The Other Side of Secret (Japanese: シークレットの向こう側 Hepburn: Shīkuretto no Mukōgawa) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Hideaki Yoshikawa. The series is published by Media Factory in Japan and by Seven Seas Entertainment in the United States.

Release

Hideaki Yoshikawa began serializing the manga in the November issue of Media Factory's seinen manga magazine Monthly Comic Alive on 27 September 2014.[2] The series concluded in the magazine's December 2015 issue on 27 October 2015,[3] and has been collected into four volumes.

North American publisher Seven Seas Entertainment announced its license to the series on 14 July 2015.[4][5]

Volumes

No.Japanese release dateJapanese ISBNEnglish release dateEnglish ISBN
1 22 November 2014[6]ISBN 978-4-04-066897-09 June 2016[7]ISBN 978-1-626923-1-64
  1. "Overture"
  2. "Tragedy"
  3. "Determine"
2 23 March 2015[8]ISBN 978-4-04-067287-813 September 2016[7]ISBN 978-1-626923-30-0
  1. "The other side"
  2. "Intruders"
  3. "YU-TO"
  4. "Return"
3 23 July 2015[9]ISBN 978-4-04-067571-86 December 2016[7]ISBN 978-1-626923-70-6
  1. "Who are you?"
  2. "Wound & Relief"
  3. "YO-TO 2 ~Where did he come from...?~"
  4. "KA-YO ~Who is the person?~
4 21 November 2015[10]ISBN 978-4-04-067841-2March 28, 2017[7]ISBN 978-1-626924-41-3
  1. "Go to the bottom"
  2. "Memory"
  3. "Truth"
  4. "And They're going on"
Ex. "Epilogue"

Reception

Rebecca Silverman of Anime News Network gave the first volume a grade of B-. She felt that the story was interesting, but that the volume suffered from being mostly setup. She also felt that the series' fanservice was out of place, writing that it seemed "as if Yoshikawa felt the need to stop and give us a show before moving the plot along." She was positive toward the sibling relationships portrayed in the story, enjoying the fact that they were platonic as opposed to "distracting us with a forbidden love angle." She called the manga's art "serviceable without being particularly good", noting the lack of visible motion during action scenes, and commented that the series monsters were better drawn than its people.[11]

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.