List of Fruits Basket characters

The characters of Fruits Basket were created by Natsuki Takaya in the manga written and illustrated by her. The manga was serialized in 136 chapters in the monthly manga magazine Hana to Yume between January 1999 and November 2006, and collected in 23 tankōbon volumes by Hakusensha.[1] The series was adapted as a drama CD distributed as a promotional item with an issue of Hana to Yume[2] and as a 26-episode anime television series produced by Studio DEEN initially broadcast on TV Tokyo between July 5 and December 27, 2001.[3] The manga is licensed in English by Chuang Yi in Singapore,[4] Madman Entertainment in Australia and New Zealand,[5] and Tokyopop in North America.[6] The anime is licensed in English by FUNimation Entertainment, which distributes it in North America itself, in the United Kingdom through Revelation Films, and in Australia and New Zealand through Madman Entertainment.

The series tells the story of Tohru Honda, an orphan girl who, after meeting Yuki, Kyo, and Shigure Sohma, learns that thirteen members of the Sohma family are possessed by the animals of the Chinese zodiac and cursed to turn into their animal forms when they embrace someone of the opposite sex or their bodies come under a great deal of stress. As the series progresses, Tohru meets the rest of the zodiac and the family's mysterious head, Akito Sohma, and eventually resolves to break the curse that burdens them.

The name spellings used here are those given in the official Region 1 DVD and English manga releases. Names are given in Western order, with the family name last.

Contents

Creation and conception

According to Natsuki Takaya in interviews, Tohru Honda was the first character she created for the series,[7] with Yuki and Kyo Sohma soon after.[8] When asked how she came up with Tohru's personality and background, she said:

I thought that for a girl to accept other people's feelings so wholeheartedly, she'd have to have a slightly unusual way of looking at things so that she wouldn't be crushed by having so much empathy. But I still worried that I needed something else to flesh her out. And then the thought, "Oh, yeah—I'll make her use super-polite language, and use it incorrectly!" came to me all at once. After that, her character was completed in no time.[9]

Takaya gave Tohru a name normally used only for men because she likes to give masculine names to female characters "to balance them out."[10] In addition, Takaya chose to have other characters address her as "Tohru-kun", using an honorific typically used for boys, because she thought it was "a more dignified form of address."[9]

The next characters Takaya developed were Yuki, Kyo, and Shigure Sohma, and of these Kyo was "the first character whose personality and looks really hit me...without any hesitation."[11] According to the Fruits Basket Character Book, she had Yuki dress in Chinese-style clothes because she likes them.[12] She added that she believes they suit his androgynous nature, and that she deliberately gave Yuki and Kyo different tastes to distinguish them.[13]

Takaya described these four characters, Tohru, Yuki, Kyo, and Shigure, as the main cast.[14] The first character she developed after them was Kisa Sohma, whom she described as "in competition to be the first or second most beautiful character."[14]

Takaya named most of the Sohmas affected by the curse after the month in the former Japanese lunisolar calendar that corresponds to their zodiac animal.[15] The exceptions are Kureno and Momiji, whose names were swapped by mistake;[16] Kyo, who as the cat is not part of the official zodiac; and Yuki.[17] According to the author, no other names have meanings.[10]

Tohru's family and friends

Tohru Honda

Tohru Honda (本田 透 Honda Tōru?), aged 15, is an orphaned high school student who, at the start of the story, begins living with Shigure, Yuki, and Kyo Sohma in exchange for housekeeping. She loves to cook, describes herself as an excellent housekeeper, and has an after-school job as an office janitor to pay her tuition fees to avoid being a burden on her grandfather.[18] She is depicted as polite, optimistic, extremely kind, and selfless;[19][20] several other characters, including Kyo,[21] Rin,[22] and Hanajima,[23] tell her she needs to look out for herself and not shoulder everyone else's burdens. In the original Japanese, Tohru habitually speaks formally (see Honorific speech in Japanese), but not always correctly,[9] a habit she picked up from her father, Katsuya, after he died when she was three, as a way of replacing him in her mother's eyes.[24] Tohru's mother, Kyoko, raised her alone until she died in a car accident shortly after Tohru entered high school, a few months before the start of the story. Tohru repeatedly calls Kyoko the most important person in her life and treasures her photograph;[25] when she falls in love with Kyo she feels guilty of being "unfaithful" to her mother's memory.[26]

In the first half of the series, as Tohru learns about the zodiac curse and its effects on those she loves, she becomes distressed, and when she learns that the dangerous Akito is the "god" of the zodiac, she resolves to break the curse.[27] Only later does she admit that she wants to free Kyo most of all.[28] Despite setbacks, both external and personal,[29] Tohru stubbornly persists in her goal and eventually frees Kyo and her friends.[30] In the last chapter, she is moving with Kyo to another city so he can continue his martial arts training, and in the final pages it is shown that they had a son and a granddaughter.[31] Voiced by: Yui Horie (Japanese), Laura Bailey (English)

Arisa Uotani

Arisa Uotani (魚谷 ありさ Uotani Arisa?), aged 17, is a former gang member (a "yankee",[32] the Japanese version of the American "thug" image) and one of Tohru's closest friends. Arisa is depicted as tough, brash, and sometimes violent;[33] she wears long skirts, sometimes carries a lead pipe, and often speaks like a man (see Gender differences in spoken Japanese). Arisa is tall for a girl, and once claims she wishes to reach 6 feet (1.8 m) tall.[34] She is especially competitive with Kyo and bickers with him frequently. Her childhood was troubled: father is an alcoholic and her mother left him for another man when Arisa was young; Arisa joined an all-girl gang called The Ladies in fifth grade, and idolized Kyoko Honda's reputation from her gang days. When Arisa met Kyoko's daughter Tohru in middle school, and then Kyoko herself, she was shocked by the change from gang-leader into doting mother, but became friends after Kyoko helped her escape from her gang.[35] With Saki Hanajima, she swore on Kyoko's grave to look after Tohru, and in their "parental" protection of Tohru, noted by Kyo and Yuki,[36] Arisa is depicted as the brash and direct father-figure.[37] Tohru calls her Uo-chan and her manga symbol is a fish, the meaning of the first kanji (魚) of her family name. Arisa works a couple different part-time jobs during the series; at one of them, in a convenience store, she meets Kureno Sohma and is immediately attracted to him, though she worries about their nine-year age difference.[38] They meet a second time a few days later, when he nearly kisses her after buying her lunch, but after that he refuses to see her again because of his promise to Akito,[39] and she tries to get over him. When Kureno leaves Akito, Arisa helps him move out, telling him that she has been waiting for him all this time,[40] and in the final chapter she is preparing to move in with him.[31] Voiced by: Yuka Imai (Japanese), Parisa Fakhri (English)

Saki Hanajima

Saki Hanajima (花島 咲 Hanajima Saki?), aged 17, is a psychic girl who has the ability to sense people's "waves" and send out electric "waves" (denpa in Japanese), and one of Tohru's closest friends. She is depicted as very perceptive, polite,[41] with a usually deadpan manner, and is often seen eating or doing Tohru's or Arisa's hair when not in class. According to an author's note, in contrast with her Gothic Lolita appearance,[41] she likes shōjo manga and novels and bought a copy of Shigure Sohma's Summer-Colored Sigh.[42] Tohru calls her Hana-chan, and her manga symbol is a small flower, the meaning of the first kanji (花) of her family name. Hanajima had trouble controlling her abilities when she was young, and blamed herself for the near-fatal collapse of a boy who was bullying her.[43] Like Arisa Uotani, Hanajima is extremely protective of Tohru, who was the first person in school who truly accepted her, which acceptance helped her gain control of her powers.[43] She wears black fingernail polish and (when not in her school uniform) black dresses, often with a cloak or veil,[44] habits Hanajima started before she met Tohru as a way of signaling her guilt.[43] With Arisa, she promised on Tohru's mother's grave to look after Tohru and in their near-"parental" protection,[36] she acts as the "motherly" figure.[37] She uses her reputation for sending out "poison waves" to shield Tohru from the malice of Yuki's fan club.[45] She has a close relationship with her family, which accepts and nurtures her gifts, especially her younger brother, Megumi, who also has psychic abilities. When Hanajima sees Kazuma Sohma when he comes in for Kyo's parent-teacher conference, she calls him "handsome,"[46] and later at the class performance of Sorta Cinderella, she seeks Kazuma out to talk with him.[47] Kyo is disturbed enough at the idea of Hanajima in a relationship with his foster-father, that she and Uotani tease him with the possibility.[48] However, in the final chapter, Hanajima is working as a cook at Kazuma's dojo, and it is implied they are in a relationship.[31] Voiced by: Reiko Yasuhara (Japanese), Daphne Gere (English)

Katsuya Honda

Katsuya Honda (本田 勝也 Honda Katsuya?) is the late father of Tohru Honda and husband of Kyoko Honda. He appears only in the manga in flashbacks. Katsuya habitually spoke formally (see Honorific speech in Japanese) as a way of distancing himself from the world,[49] a habit that, according to his father, Tohru later adopted.[24] He met Kyoko as a student teacher at her middle school and recognized that her rebellious behavior was as much protection as his own polite manners;[50] in turn, Kyoko initially described his manners as "fake polite". Despite their eight-year difference in age (he was 21, she was 13), they fell in love; he helped her set aside her gangster lifestyle and they married after she finished middle school. Three years after Tohru was born, Katsuya died of pneumonia while on a business trip.[49]

Kyoko Honda

Kyoko Honda (本田 今日子 Honda Kyōko?), her maiden name Kyoko Katsunuma, is the late mother of Tohru Honda, appearing only in flashbacks and photographs treasured by Tohru. In middle school, Kyoko was the leader of an all-female Bōsōzoku gang called Red Butterfly Suicide Squad, the name coming from how a motorcycle's tail-lights supposedly look like a red butterfly at night.[51] She told Kyo Sohma she was ignored and rejected by her parents, and fell in love with a student teacher named Katsuya Honda who stood up for her when her parents disowned her after a gang fight. Katsuya and Kyoko married after she left middle school and had a daughter, Tohru, and Kyoko learned how to work through difficulties together with Katsuya.[52] She was devastated by her husband's death and nearly killed herself before remembering her three-year-old daughter needed her.[49] Because of her experiences, Kyoko raised Tohru to believe that everyone needs to feel needed,[49] and helped Arisa Uotani leave her own gang.[35] Tohru calls Kyoko the most important person in her life, and repeats bits of her mother's emotional wisdom throughout the series. Kyoko died a few months before the start of the series when she was struck by a car. Kyo was present at the accident but could not save her without revealing his curse, and heard her last words as "I'll never forgive you."[53] In chapter 135, a flashback of her final moments shows that she held no ill will toward Tohru or Kyo and was in fact trying to say "I'll never forgive you if you don't keep your promise to protect Tohru"--an act of charging Kyo to protect Tohru.[54] Voiced by: Reiko Yasuhara (Japanese), Julie Mayfield (English)

The Sohmas

Akito Sohma

Akito Sohma (草摩 慊人 Sōma Akito?) is the head of the Sohma family and very frail. He often gets sick and runs fevers, and Hatori Sohma claims half his doctor's work is tending to Akito, who he says "specializes in getting sick."[55] Akito's age is not given, but he is a few years younger than Ritsu and is said to be at least twenty by Shigure.[39][56] Akito is depicted as short-tempered and abusive, and has physically and emotionally scarred many Sohmas, including Hatori, Rin, Kisa, Yuki, and Kyo. While part of the Sohma family curse, Akito is not possessed by a spirit of the Chinese zodiac, but rather fulfills the role of the Jade Emperor, a figure from the stories about the origins of the zodiac; she describes herself as the "god" of the zodiac, the "one who controls the Zodiac", and the "master of their souls."[27] Kazuma Sohma tells Tohru Honda that to the rest of the zodiac, Akito is a figure of awe they cannot resist, with whom they have a "bond of blood."[57] Akito's mother, Ren Sohma, denies that the zodiac bond is real, and Akito is obsessed with proving her wrong.[58] Once the zodiac members are old enough, she desires to have them live within the Sohma compound for the rest of their lives in a never-ending "banquet."[59] Akito initially allows Tohru to live with Shigure because she believes that Tohru will come to reject Yuki and Kyo because of the curse,[60] and when instead they learn that outsiders can accept them and so grow away from her, she comes to hate Tohru most of all.[61] In the anime, Akito and Tohru come to an accommodation centered on Akito's fears of dying young, which is an effect of the curse described only in the anime.[62] In the manga, through Tohru's efforts to break the curse, Akito comes to realize that holding onto the bond, she has hurt herself as much as the others and lets it go.[30]

In the anime, Akito is biologically male.[62] In the manga, Akito is female but was brought up as a boy by her mother, Ren, and it is not revealed until Chapter 97 that Akito is biologically female (it is believed that, in the second season of the anime, it will be revealed that Akito is, in fact, female (despite "her" obviously male chest and voice, at least in the English dub).[39] Ren decided to raise Akito as a male because she was ashamed of giving birth to a girl who was the "god" to the Zodiac, and who was receiving more attention from her husband, Akira.[63] The only other Sohmas who knew about Akito's biological sex were the oldest four zodiac members: Kureno, Shigure, Hatori, and Ayame.[39] After the curse is broken, Akito begins dressing as and living as a woman,[64] and in the final chapter Shigure, with whom she is in love, moves in with her.[31] Voiced by: Wakaba Murasaki (Japanese), Chad Cline (English).

Yuki Sohma

Yuki Sohma (草摩 由希 Sōma Yuki?), aged 16-18, is the rat of the Chinese zodiac and younger brother of Ayame. Yuki is depicted as an attractive, reserved, and accomplished young man with many admirers, but who finds being friendly difficult. When Yuki was young, his mother gave control of him to Akito Sohma, who kept him separated from the rest of the zodiac and convinced him no one liked him;[65] because of this, Yuki has low self-esteem and feels isolated.[66] He is known as "Prince Yuki" and "Prince Charming" at school, where he has a fan club headed by Motoko Minagawa that tries to "protect" him from other admirers, with the result that Yuki is further isolated,[67] and he is pressured by his popularity to become president of the student council despite his misgivings.[68] Yuki, however, wishes that he could be with people as friends, rather than be admired from afar, and envies both Kyo Sohma's and Kakeru Manabe's easy ways with others.[69][70] Yuki is touched when, faced with the prospect of having her memory of the Sohma family secret erased, Tohru Honda asks that he remain her friend,[71] which no one had asked him before.[72] With Tohru's help Yuki is gradually able to "open the lid" of his feelings, and the summer after she begins living in Shigure's house, Yuki admits to himself that he loves her.[73]

When Yuki was around six or seven years old, he ran away from Akito.[74] Yuki has always had fond feelings for Tohru for actually "needing" him.[74] However, he later admits to Manabe that he was looking for a mother-figure and found her in Tohru.[72] As the rat, Yuki despises the current cat, Kyo, despite envying him, and is contemptuous of his attempts to defeat him. Even when he realizes the true nature of his feelings for Tohru, Yuki is uncomfortable when he recognizes her and Kyo's growing feelings for each other.[75] Yuki becomes attracted to Machi Kuragi, a student council treasurer who also had a traumatic childhood,[76][77] and falls in love with her. When he knows that Kyo will be confessing his love to Tohru, Yuki meets with Machi and is with her when his curse lifts, whereupon the first thing he does is embrace her.[30] In the last chapter, he gives Machi a key to his new apartment, where he will be living as he attends university.[31] Voiced by: Aya Hisakawa (Japanese), Eric Vale (English) It is presumed that he married Machi and had a daughter who married Tohru and Kyo's son.

Kyo Sohma

Kyo Sohma (草摩 夾 Sōma Kyō?), aged 16-18, is cursed by the cat, an animal not in the Chinese zodiac but which legend says would have been if it had not been tricked by the rat into missing the induction feast (see Zodiac origin stories).[18] In an author's note, Natsuki Takaya described the character of Kyo as a powerful force that pulled the story of Fruits Basket along.[78] Kyo is depicted as an orange-haired young man who is short-tempered and charismatic, if initially awkward around people;[79] Arisa Uotani once calls him "anger management boy,"[36] and Yuki Sohma expresses envy of his ability to make friends easily.[69] He is also fiercely competitive, and can be easily manipulated into doing things he does not want to by turning it into a competition—especially against Yuki. As the cat, Kyo hates Yuki, the current rat of the zodiac, whom he sees as never having to work hard at anything,[36] and has dedicated his life to defeating him. Shortly before the series beginning, Kyo made a bet with Akito: if he defeats Yuki in a fight before graduating high school, he would officially be accepted as part of the zodiac; however, if he does not, Kyo would be confined inside the Sohma estate for the rest of his life.[80] Despite many months of strict training, however, Kyo never lands a decent blow on Yuki.[81] Their rivalry distresses Tohru Honda, who likes them both, but she comes to worry even more when they do not fight.[82] The two eventually tell each other, during an argument, they envy as well as despise each other and come to a truce for Tohru's sake.[83]

At the start of the story, Kyo moves into Shigure's house with Yuki and Tohru.[18] When Kyo was young, his mother died in an accident rumored to be suicide over her son's curse, and after his father rejected him, Kyo was taken in by Kazuma Sohma. The two love each other as father and son,[84] but Kazuma insists he continue to live with Shigure because he believes Tohru is helping him open up.[85] Aside from his foster father, however, Kyo pushes away the people who want to help him, because he is ashamed of the true form of his zodiac animal—a grotesque, foul-smelling, monster—which he turns into when his bone juzu bead bracelet is removed.[84] When Tohru sees his true form, however, she is initially repulsed but follows him to beg him to stay with her, which strengthens their bond.[84] However, Kyo also blames himself for the death of Tohru's mother, whom he could have saved at the risk of turning into a cat, and he was shaken by Kyoko's last words, "I'll never forgive you..."[53] As the story progresses, Kyo falls in love with Tohru, but he refuses to subject her to the pain he is convinced he will cause, so when she confesses she loves him, he rejects her, calling himself "disillusioned."[53] Only when Uotani, Hanajima, and Yuki impress upon him how deeply his rejection hurt Tohru does he get up the courage to accept her, and when he does finally confess to her, his curse lifts—along with the rest of the zodiac.[30] In the last chapter, he and Tohru begin moving out of Shigure's house to another city, where he will study at another dojo in preparation for inheriting Kazuma's, and in the final pages it is shown that they had a son and a granddaughter.[31] Voiced by: Tomokazu Seki (Japanese), Jerry Jewell (English).

Shigure Sohma

Shigure Sohma (草摩 紫呉 Sōma Shigure?), aged 27, is the dog of the Chinese zodiac and the owner of the house where he, Tohru, Yuki, and Kyo live. He is a writer who publishes literary novels under his own name and trashy romances under pen names. His most successful pen name is Noa Kiritani, which he used for his erotic novel series, Summer-Colored Sigh. He is best friends with his cousins Hatori and Ayame, and he and Ayame like to pretend they are lovers.[86] In an author's note, Natsuki Takaya described Shigure as a "problem child."[87] In the anime, Shigure is depicted as lazy and dirty-minded, seeming to take nothing seriously,[88][89] and with a fondness for teasing people—especially his editor Mitsuru, but also Kyo, Yuki, Tohru, and Ritsu. In the manga, he behaves the same but is also shown to be manipulative:[90] he admits early on to Hatori that he is using Tohru as "a pawn" for some deeper purpose and calls himself "filthiest of all" for being willing to sacrifice anyone to get what he wants.[91] More than once, he provokes Akito Sohma with apparently undiplomatic responses that create other confrontations, such as Akito's visit to the summer beach house in volumes 10 and 11.[92] Shigure eventually admits to Kureno Sohma that he hopes the disruption Tohru has caused will further weaken the weakening zodiac curse, and gives Tohru hints to figure out how to break it herself.[26] Shigure's deepest feelings are for Akito, and he once had sex with Akito's mother, Ren, because he was upset that, although Akito secretly felt the same of Shigure, she was sleeping with Kureno.[56][93] In the end, it is implied that Shigure's machinations have all been aimed at freeing Akito from the curse and the need to live as a man, so that he can have her to himself. He gives Akito the woman's kimono worn when she announces that she will live as a woman,[64] and in the last chapter, he moves in with Akito in the main Sohma house.[31] Shigure habitually wears a kimono unless he has to leave home for business, which according to Takaya is his way of getting into "the spirit of things" as a writer.[94] Takaya derived his name from the tenth month, shigurezuki or "autumn showers month," which is the month of the dog, of the traditional Japanese calendar.[95] Voiced by: Ryotaro Okiayu (Japanese), John Burgmeier (English).

Kagura Sohma

Kagura Sohma (草摩 楽羅 Sōma Kagura?), aged 18-20, is the boar of the Chinese zodiac. She is depicted as a girlish young woman[96] with great strength, and the impulsive behavior associated with those born in her zodiac year.[97] The latter often takes the form of berating and beating up Kyo, to whom she insists she is engaged. When Kagura was seven and Kyo was five, when he was all alone because he carried the curse of the cat, she played with him,[98] and one day threatened him into proposing to her (using a knife in the manga,[99] a boulder in the anime[100]). After having the nature of her love questioned by Rin Sohma, Kagura eventually admits to Kyo that her love was based on pity,[98] much as Kazuma fears Tohru's is,[101] and that she has clung to him because, compared to the cat, she has it easy.[98] After Kyo tells her he cannot love her, she claims to give up hope of winning him[98] but still loves Kyo and cares for him;[102] when Tohru admits to Rin Sohma that she loves Kyo, Kagura impulsively strikes her, saying that the one to tell that to is Kyo himself.[101] According to an author's note, Kagura is an "older sister type who's always ready to help."[102] She attends a local college while living with her parents, who are shown taking her double-edged personality in stride, and Rin. Kagura is the only female member of the zodiac who is not shown to have been injured by Akito. Takaya derived her name from the eleventh month, kagurazuki or "month of Shinto song and dance," which is the month of the boar, of the traditional Japanese calendar.[95] According to the anime, when she turns into a boar, she's revealed to have brown fur and is able to talk with her snout. Voiced by: Kotono Mitsuishi (Japanese), Meredith McCoy (English)

Momiji Sohma

Momiji Sohma (草摩 紅葉 Sōma Momiji?), aged 15-17, is the rabbit of the Chinese zodiac. His father, one of the richer members of the Sohma family, is Japanese, while his mother is German (they speak German and Japanese in the manga, but only Japanese in the anime).[90] Momiji is depicted as a cute, cheerful, androgynous boy who hides a sad family life behind his sunny demeanor. In an author's note, Takaya described him as "the most comfortable" of the Sohmas with his spirit possession, and "the most successful of the boys."[103] Momiji is older than he initially appears, and Tohru is surprised to learn he is only a year younger than she is. To Kyo's horror, Momiji wears the girl's version of their high school uniform with shorts instead of a skirt,[104] until he has a growth spurt at the start of his second year and switches to the boy's uniform.[105] He lives alone inside the Sohma family compound, and was raised by servants.[103] His mother learned about the zodiac curse when she first held him, just after he was born, and was repulsed; she later had Hatori erase her memory that Momiji is her son.[106] Because of this, his younger sister, Momo, is unaware he is her older brother,[106] even though she is interested in him.[107] Despite his upbringing, Momiji is insightful about others and emotionally strong. In chapter 115, his curse is broken before the rest of the zodiac,[93] and he decides to leave Akito despite the latter's pleading.[108] Momiji takes to Tohru very quickly, even hugging her when they are formally introduced despite his curse. He sometimes helps Tohru at her evening job as an office cleaner in one of his father's buildings, and once substitutes for her when she is sick with a cold.[109] He is very fond of Tohru, and even defies Akito to protect her.[27] He later warns Kyo that if he does not act on his feelings for Tohru, someone else, such as himself, might steal her away;[105] in the final chapter, Momiji tells Hatsuharu and Rin that he hopes to find a girlfriend as wonderful as Tohru. He plays the violin.[31] Takaya derived his name from the ninth month of the traditional Japanese calendar, momijitsuki or "autumn leaves month";[95] he was supposed to have been named after the third month, the month of the rabbit, but according to the author, she mixed up his and Kureno's positions in the zodiac.[16] Voiced by: Ayaka Saitō (Japanese), Kimberly Grant (English)

Hatori Sohma

Hatori Sohma (草摩 はとり Sōma Hatori?), aged 27, He is the Dragon of the Zodiac even though his curse form is a seahorse. His father was the former dragon of the Zodiac,[110] the private doctor to the Sohma family. He is responsible for erasing memories (using a form of hypnosis that is handed down in his line of the family)[110] of those outsiders who discover the Sohma family secret,[55] such as Yuki's childhood playmates.[65] Hatori is depicted as a tall, somber man who is rarely amused by the antics of his best friends, Shigure and Ayame. He is often the only one who can restrain Ayame's worst behavior,[111] and is the only person Shigure trusts enough to talk about his schemes. He takes his duties to the Sohma family and as a doctor seriously, and warns Tohru about the dangers of getting too involved with the family.[55] In an author's note, Natsuki Takaya described him as "the best marriage material of the cast."[110] When his curse activates, Hatori transforms into a 8-centimeter (3.1 in) long seahorse (in Japanese tatsuno-otoshigo, literally "baby dragon") rather than an actual dragon, which he is self-conscious about.[112] According to Shigure, this is a sign the zodiac curse has weakened.[28]

Two years before the series began, he was engaged to Kana Sohma, the assistant in his doctor's office.[55] The relationship ended when Hatori asked Akito for permission to marry Kana and in response, Akito attacked Hatori (in the anime, he threw a vase), leaving him almost blind in his left eye; Kana blamed herself for the incident and felt so guilty about it that Hatori was forced to erase her memory of their relationship to ease her suffering.[112] When Tohru meets up with him near the end of Volume 2, he looks back with his time with Kana, then says his heart is like snow. After Kana marries someone else, Shigure manipulates Hatori into meeting Kana's best friend, Mayuko Shiraki, who secretly had always liked him.[113][114] In the last chapter, Hatori invites Mayuko on a Okinawa vacation.[31] Takaya derived Hatori's name from the fourth month, konohatorizuki or "month of taking leaves [to silkworms]," which is the month of the dragon, of the traditional Japanese calendar.[115] Voiced by: Kazuhiko Inoue (Japanese), Kent Williams (English)

Hatsuharu "Haru" Sohma

Hatsuharu Sohma (草摩 溌春 Sōma Hatsuharu?), age 15-17, often called Haru, is the cow of the Chinese zodiac. Hatsuharu is depicted as having a Yin and Yang personality, which is related to the cow's traditional personality.[116] He is an older-brother figure to the younger zodiac members, and is usually calm and placid, but, if provoked, can become enraged.[117] The Sohmas call these two sides of his personality his "white" and "black" sides; his hair is white with black roots, and his zodiac form is a black-and-white spotted cow.[116] He has a reputation in the family for being somewhat stupid, and when he was a child he blamed Yuki Sohma, the current rat, for it because of the story of how the rat tricked the ox to become first in the zodiac. After Yuki asked Hatsuharu whether he believes he is stupid, he realized the mental trap and has since cared very much for Yuki. Hatsuharu is in love with Rin Sohma and has an on-again/off-again secret relationship with her. He is protective of those he cares about, especially Rin, Yuki, and Kisa, and once confronts and almost punches Akito for confining Rin,[118] and looked for Kisa when she ran away from home. Hiro admires Hatsuharu as a brother figure, even calling him Haru-nii ("big brother Haru").[119] Hatsuharu has a bad sense of direction, and once becomes lost for three days in another town while looking for Kyo in order to challenge him.[120] He likes to tease Kyo in a dead-pan way; Kyo in turn calls him "downright lewd" for saying Momiji should wear the girls' uniform.[104] He is usually shown wearing various jewelry and leather accessories, which, according to an author's note, he makes himself.[121] Natsuki Takaya derived his name from the first month, hatsuharu meaning "new year" or "early spring," which is the month of the ox, of the traditional Japanese calendar,[115] though his name is written with different kanji than the month. Voiced by: Akio Suyama (Japanese), Justin Cook (English)

Ayame "Aya" Sohma

Ayame Sohma (草摩 綾女 Sōma Ayame?), aged 27, is the snake of the Chinese zodiac, and Yuki's older brother, a young man with very long silver hair and striking eyes, which Tohru notes makes him resemble Yuki.[86] Ayame is depicted as vivacious, flamboyant, self-confident, and self-centered, with a knack for annoying Yuki and Kyo (one of the few things they initially agree upon), and often getting hurt by Yuki and Kyo in response. In an author's note, Natsuki Takaya described him as a draining person to meet in real life.[122] Despite his age, he refers to himself with the boyish pronoun boku (see Japanese pronouns). He runs a shop, named after himself, that sells custom-made "romantic costumes" such as frilly dresses and maid costumes with the help of Mine Kuramae, his seamstress.

Ayame is best friends with Shigure and Hatori, who are the same age; while Shigure goes along with Ayame's outrageous personality,[86] Hatori is the only one, according to Shigure and Takaya, who can restrain Ayame's worst behavior.[122][123] As the snake, Ayame is especially susceptible to cold.[86] When Ayame was in high school, he was president of the student council,[123] and is proud that Yuki is following him.[124] Ayame fears the "nothingness" of not being acknowledged.[124]

When Ayame was young, he completely ignored Yuki, and even forgot Yuki's name once, but during the series he realizes that he will be completely alone, with only his brother as company when they get older. This spurs an obsession with gaining Yuki's love, which he attempts to do by demanding it from Yuki,[124] and later trying more thoughtful ways to prove that Yuki can depend on Ayame. As the series progresses, Yuki gradually accepts Ayame as a brother, and even tries to understand him. When Ayame is freed from the curse, the first thing he does is embrace Mine Kuramae and confess he loves her.[30] Takaya derived the name Ayame (normally a female name, meaning iris, or "blood iris" to be more specific) from the fifth month, ayamezuki or "month of irises," which is the month of the snake, of the traditional Japanese calendar.[115] Voiced by: Mitsuru Miyamoto (Japanese), Chris Sabat (English)

Kisa Sohma

Kisa Sohma (草摩 杞紗 Sōma Kisa?), aged 12–14, is the tiger of the Chinese zodiac. She is depicted as a cute but very shy and withdrawn girl. In author's notes, Natsuki Takaya described her as "in competition to be the first or second most beautiful character"[14] and as a "girly-girl."[125] When Kisa starts seventh grade, her classmates harass and ostracize her because of her naturally tawny hair and golden eyes, an effect of her curse, and the cause of her shyness. Because she feels ashamed of being bullied, she does not tell her worried mother what is happening and stops speaking; when this distresses her mother even further, she runs away and is found by Hatsuharu.[126] She also sees Hatsuharu as an older brother figure. Tohru Honda, who understands Kisa's distress because she was once bullied herself, helps Kisa to come out of her shell, and Kisa becomes very attached to Tohru, calling her "onee-chan" (translated as "big sister" in both the English manga and subtitled anime, and as "Sissy" in the English dubbed anime).[68][127] She sometimes gets frustrated at Hiro because of his treatment of Tohru. Kisa likes Hiro and is hurt when he withdraws from her to protect her from Akito,[68] much like Hatsuharu is hurt by Rin.[119] As the series progresses, Kisa is shown struggling with her shyness, and feels it is a major accomplishment to greet Kyo directly, instead of relying on Hiro to speak for her.[105] Kisa is a fan of a fictional anime series Mogeta, which she sometimes watches with Tohru. She is called Sat-chan, using just the last syllable of her given name, by Shigure and Hiro's mother. Takaya derived her name from the second month, kisaragi or "changing clothes month," which is the month of the tiger, of the traditional Japanese calendar.[115] Voiced by: Kaori Nazuka (Japanese), Kate Bristol (English) In the final chapter, she is seen holding Hiro's arm and they are presumed to be a couple.

Hiro Sohma

Hiro Sohma (草摩 燈路 Sōma Hiro?), aged 11–12, is the Ram of the zodiac and loves Kisa more than anything. They were the best of friends in elementary school. When he told Akito that he was in love with Kisa, she became furious. Afterward, Kisa was beaten up by Akito (by "no reason" to her) but Hiro knew that his confession had led Akito to attacking Kisa. While visiting Kisa in the hospital, Hiro, shocked, confused, and sad, thought it would be better to stay away from Kisa. When they started middle school, Hiro ignored her, thinking that it would prevent her from anymore attacks from Akito. When he found out she was being picked on by the other kids, he could not do anything as it would be awkward for him to defend her suddenly after months of ignoring. Hiro accidentally witnessed Akito pushing Isuzu out of a window, which later causes Hiro some distress, because he found out about Hatsuharu and Isuzu dating, and witnessed Isuzu being pushed out of the window by Akito, something Haru would never forgive. Rin and Akito forced him not to tell Haru about the incident he had witnessed. In Chapter 118, he is freed from the curse before most of the zodiac, and the first thing he does is hold his infant sister, Hinata, for the first time.[128] Natsuki Takaya derived his name from the seventh month, fumihirogetsuki or "month of publication," which is the month of the sheep, of the traditional Japanese calendar.[95] Voiced by: Yuriko Fuchizaki (Japanese), Aaron Dismuke (English) In the final chapter, he and Kisa are presumed to be a couple due to her holding his arm and his affectionately comforting her.

Ritsu Sohma

Ritsu Sohma (草摩 利津 Sōma Ritsu?), aged 21–22, is the monkey of the Chinese zodiac. He is depicted as a beautiful but unstable young man with very low self-esteem and a tendency to overreact. He apologizes frantically for everything, even things that are not his fault.[129] In this, he takes after his mother,[129] the hostess of the Sohma family's onsen,[130] whose position he is in training to take over.[131] Ritsu dresses in women's clothing because he says he then feels less pressure from society, and is initially mistaken for a woman by Tohru Honda because of his long hair and beauty.[132] Most Sohmas call him "Rit-chan" and, to Shigure's amusement, Tohru calls him "Rit-chan-san" (see Japanese honorifics). Shigure likes to play with Ritsu's insecurities and gullibility, much as he does his editor, Mitsuru;[133] when Ritsu and Mitsuru meet, they realize they have this in common.,[133] and in a bonus story in the first fan-book, he and Mitsuru are a couple.[134] In the final chapter of the manga, Ritsu is giving Kagura one of his women's kimonos, has cut his hair short, and is not dressed like a girl. Natsuki Takaya derived his name from the eighth month, odakaritsuki or "rice harvest month," which is the month of the monkey, of the traditional Japanese calendar.[95] In an author's note, Takaya said that she regretted how little role Ritsu played in the main story,[131] appearing a total of five times. Voiced by: Miina Tominaga (Japanese), Mike McFarland (English)

Isuzu "Rin" Sohma

Isuzu Sohma (草摩 依鈴 Sōma Isuzu?), aged 17–19, is the horse of the Chinese zodiac. She appears only in the manga. She is often called Rin because that is an alternate reading of 鈴, the second kanji of her given name. She is tall and initially has hip-length dark hair; according to an author's note, Natsuki Takaya initially designed her with very short hair but then made it long to mimic the blowing of a horse's mane in the wind.[135] Takaya's fans described Rin as "the character in charge of sexiness."[136] Rin is depicted as stubborn and independent,[137] to the point she cannot stand being dependent on someone else,[22] traits associated with those born in her zodiac year; she is also sharp-tongued but concerned about others.[138] When Rin was young her parents acted affectionate and devoted to her, unlike the parents of many cursed Sohmas, but when she asked if they were happy, the strain of pretending for her benefit shattered the facade, after which they neglected and abused her to the point she was hospitalized. After this her parents kicked her out and Rin moved into Kagura Sohma's home.[139] Rin and Hatsuharu have a romantic and sexual relationship that began before the start of the series. When Akito finds out about it, Rin claims full responsibility to protect Hatsuharu, and to punish her Akito pushes Rin out a window; while recuperating in the hospital, Rin breaks up with Hatsuharu both to protect him and to avoid burdening him, but without explaining why.[140][141] To free Hatsuharu, Rin starts searching for a way to break the curse, and asks Kazuma,[57] Shigure,[139] and Ren Sohma[142] for help, though she resists the assistance of Tohru Honda, who she thinks is too nice than is good for herself.[22] Ren offers to help if Rin steals a treasure (a black box) from Akito, but Rin is caught by Akito, who confines her in the cat's prison and cuts off her hair;[118] after she is released by Kureno, she reconciles with Hatsuharu,[142] accepting his support. She also accepts Tohru's assistance because of the latter's kindness,[143] and grows as protective of her as of Hatsuharu, getting angry when someone upsets or hurts her.[58][101] After the zodiac curse is broken, Rin cannot understand how others can move on as if Akito's abuse never happened,[144] and in the final chapter she says she still gets angry.[31] Takaya derived her name from the sixth month, isuzukuretsuki or "month of the last cool spring days," which is the month of the horse, of the traditional Japanese calendar.[95]

Kureno Sohma

Kureno Sohma (草摩 紅野 Sōma Kureno?), aged 26, is the former rooster of the Chinese zodiac. He appears only in the manga. According to Natsuki Takaya, while he was still cursed, he did not like others to see his animal form, which was a sparrow instead of a rooster.[145] He is depicted as a polite and selfless young man. Arisa Uotani describes Kureno as "like Tohru" because of his over-the-top politeness and scatterbrained idiosyncrasies,[38] and Saki Hanajima and Akito Sohma both compare his selflessness to Tohru's.[23] In his mid-teens, about ten years before the series begins, Kureno's curse was somehow broken, but because of Akito's distress he promised never to leave.[39] Kureno and Akito have a sexual relationship, and when Shigure learned about it, some time before the start of the series, in retaliation he slept with Akito's mother, Ren.[146] Akito keeps Kureno away from the rest of the family to hide that he is no longer cursed, and Kureno does most of Akito's work as the head of the family.[147] As a result, Kureno is so sheltered he is 26 when he first visits a convenience store, where he meets Arisa.[38] Despite their mutual attraction, he stays away from her because, he claims to Tohru, of his promise to Akito.[39] However, when Akito locks Rin Sohma away for stealing her father's box, it is Kureno who frees her.[118] As the zodiac curse begins breaking down, Kureno eventually admits he is partially responsible for keeping Akito coddled and fearful by being too obedient, and Akito angrily stabs him in the back.[128] When Kureno is released from the hospital, he moves out of the Sohma compound with Arisa's help,[40] and in the final chapter, Arisa is preparing to move in with him.[31] In an author's note, Takaya described him as possibly the most lonely of those affected by the curse, because of his isolation.[148] He never blames Akito for his injury and still feels a responsibility to care for her. He says the best thing he can do for her is to erase his existence. Hence his moving out of the Sohma home. Takaya derived his name from the third month of the traditional Japanese calendar, kurenoharu or "late spring";[115] he was supposed to have been named after the ninth month, the month of the rooster, but according to the author, she mixed up his and Momiji's positions in the zodiac.[16]

Kazuma Sohma

Kazuma Sohma (草摩 籍真 Sōma Kazuma?) is a master of karate who runs a dojo near the Sohma family compound, where he teaches several of the younger Sohmas including Kyo, Kagura, Yuki, and Hatsuharu. He is usually addressed as shishou, meaning "master". In an author's note, Takaya said that although she draws him young, his age is "almost 40."[149] Takaya also claimed he is "clumsy with his hands and has no sense of flavor,"[149] and he is depicted as being so bad at cooking, he does not know how to prepare tea.[57] His daily routine is taken care of by his assistant at the dojo, Kunimitsu Tomoda.[150]

When he was a child, during their only meeting, Kazuma was mean to his grandfather simply because his grandfather was cursed by the cat. His grandfather had offered him a sweet but Kazuma had rejected it, saying it was cursed, and instead of getting angry, his grandfather merely smiled and forgave him. His cruelty from their only meeting haunted him as he grew up and to make amends, after Kyo's mother died, he took in and raised Kyo, the current cat, as his foster son, and has come to think of him as his own son.[149] Kazuma thinks well of Tohru and hopes her love for Kyo is sincere, and not based on pity like his grandmother's was towards his grandfather;[101] both to test Tohru's feelings and to show Kyo he can be accepted by others despite his curse, Kazuma forces Kyo to show Tohru his true form.[84][151] After Rin is hospitalized the second time during the series, he takes her in to recuperate so that she does not have to live inside the family compound, which he has done before.[28] In the final chapter, Saki Hanajima has taken a job as a cook at Kazuma's dojo and it is implied they are in a relationship.[31] Voiced by: Norihiro Inoue (Japanese), Dameon Clarke (English)

Ren Sohma

Ren Sohma (草摩 楝 Sōma Ren?) is Akito's mother. She appears only in the manga, and is depicted as an elegant but obsessive woman with long black hair similar to Rin Sohma's. According to an author's note, Takaya designed Akito and Ren to resemble each other;[152] Shigure claims that if Akito had been raised as a woman, she would have looked very much like Ren,[63] and Tohru once mistook Ren's voice for Akito's.[107] Ren and Akito are extremely antagonistic towards each other; Shigure notes that she is obsessed with her child and dead husband.[63] Her background and age were deliberately left vague by Takaya.[152] Ren was originally a Sohma household maid who won Akira's heart by being the only one to notice his loneliness and treat him with kindness, instead of as just the head of the household.[63] When she conceived and her child received, as the new god of the zodiac, more attention than herself, and then turned out to be female instead of a proper male heir, she was afraid the baby would replace her in Akira's heart and demanded Akito be raised as a male.[39][63] Before his death, Akira told Akito, but not Ren, that Akito's place in the curse was proof that his and Ren's relationship was special.[146] To feed Akito's fear of being abandoned, Ren continually claims that Akito's bond with the zodiac is fake, rather than the true love Akito claims; to prove her wrong, Akito tried to mold Yuki into a zodiac animal devoted to her (Akito).[146] After Akito began sleeping with Kureno Sohma, some time before the series began,Ren told Shigure to make him jealous and then seduced him to infuriate Akito.[146] When Rin Sohma approaches Ren for information about breaking the curse, Ren lies and promises to tell Rin how if she steals a black box owned by Akito, said to contain Akira's spirit;[63][142] later, goaded by Shigure,Ren threatens Akito with a knife to get the box, only to learn that it is as empty as her obsession.[146] Ren does not appear after this, though Akito mentions that Ren has rejected her attempts to reconcile after the zodiac curse was broken.

Others

Kakeru Manabe

Kakeru Manabe (真鍋 翔 Manabe Kakeru?), aged 16–17, sometimes called "True Pot Flies" because of the kanji that make up his name, is vice president of the student council during Yuki Sohma's presidency. He is depicted as alternately lazy and charismatically energetic, strongly reminding Yuki of his older brother, Ayame,[153] whom Kakeru refers to as "commander". Yuki also compares Manabe's ability to make friends to Kyo's.[70] Manabe sometimes claims the student council is a super-sentai–style "School Defense Force", and once tries to get the rest of the student council to pick their team colors, but that he called dibbs on black. When Yuki asked Manabe's younger half sister, Machi, What her favorite color is, Manabe later claimed that he knew that her favorite color was red. Though by saying so heavily implied that he knew about her crush on Yuki, who was decided by Manabe that his color, as president was red.[70] In an author's note, Takaya calls him a good friend and evil comrade for Yuki.[154] Manabe is Machi Kuragi's older half-brother by their mutual father's mistress, and protective of her because she is still affected by their mothers' fight, now ended, to have their own child named heir.[155] He has a girlfriend named Komaki Nakao (whom he calls "Meat☆Angel" because of her love of meat), whose father drove the car that struck and killed Kyoko Honda, also killing himself. Manabe believed that Tohru thought that she was the only one affected by the accident and confronted Tohru on Komaki's behalf, saying that she was nauseating. He tells her that she is acting like she must carry the whole world's misfortune. However, Komaki was angry at him because he had disrespected Tohru's feelings. He realized that his feelings and Komaki's were not the same and vowed to understand other people better, and later apologizes to Tohru for his hurtful behavior.[156] According to Komaki, Kakeru used to be a withdrawn, unapproachable person, but during middle school after withdrawing from the competition to be family heir he suddenly became the character Yuki meets. Voiced by: Kenichi Suzumura (Drama CD)

Machi Kuragi

Machi Kuragi (倉伎 真知 Kuragi Machi?), aged 15–17, is treasurer of the student council during Yuki Sohma's presidency and a classmate of Hatsuharu and Momiji. She only appears in the manga. She is Kakeru Manabe's younger half-sister by their mutual father's wife.[155] Machi is depicted as a quiet, nearly emotionless young woman with occasional destructive behavior, such as wrecking the student council room. She is afraid of perfection due to when she was competing for heir and was forced to act perfect. She has difficulty expressing herself, which sometimes results in Manabe making decisions for her. During their childhoods, their mothers competed to have their own child named heir, a struggle that ended when first Manabe withdrew himself from the running, then Machi's mother bore a son. Machi lives apart from her family because her mother believes she resents, and is a danger to, her younger brother for supplanting her, an accusation she did not contest even though it is wrong.[157]

Unlike most girls at school, she does not see Yuki as a prince, but as just another boy, even seeing him as being lonely.[47] Her different attitude and troubled behavior catches Yuki's eye, and he makes multiple attempts at befriending her. When Yuki and Manabe visit Machi's apartment, Yuki learns that because of the pressure to be perfect when her mother was competing with Manabe's, Machi finds perfection so disturbing she has a compulsion to mar anything too orderly, such as trashing neat rooms, walking through newly-fallen snow, and breaking pieces of a new box of chalk.[157] Machi develops feelings for Yuki, and when Tohru Honda is in the hospital and he needs to reach out to someone, Machi is able to confess to Yuki. Machi is later Yuki's girlfriend[158] Like the youngest Sohmas, Machi likes the fictional anime Mogeta, and treasures two character figurines that Yuki gives her.[158] Voiced by: Yuki Kaida (Drama CD)

Mitsuru

Mitsuru (?), family name unknown, is Shigure Sohma's editor. Shigure playfully calls her Mit-chan. A stressed-out young woman, she is usually shown pleading with Shigure to finish a manuscript on time, in response to which Shigure either evades her or falsely claims he is not finished. His tormenting pushes her to threaten suicide more than once, and Natsuki Takaya said in an author's note that Mitsuru thinks Shigure is "evil."[159] During one such episode, she meets Ritsu Sohma,[133] with whom she later develops a romantic relationship.[134][159] Voiced by: Akemi Okamura (Japanese), Cynthia Cranz (English)

Mayuko Shiraki

Mayuko Shiraki (白木 繭子 Shiraki Mayuko?) is Tohru, Kyo, Yuki, Saki, and Arisa's homeroom teacher; what subject she teaches is never given, though in an author's note, Natsuki Takaya said she thinks Shiraki fits the image of a literature teacher.[160] Shiraki is depicted as generally good-humored but sometimes aggressive—when Kyo attempts to leave class on Valentine's Day, she stops him at the door with a folder in his face and threatens to dye his hair black instead of orange,[161] and once breaks up a fight between Hatsuharu and Kyo by dumping a bucket of water over them;[162] she once demanded as a joke that, after some students familiarly addressed her "Mayu-chan-sensei," that they call her "Great Teacher Mayuko."[111] Her parents, who worry about Shiraki being unmarried, run a bookstore where she sometimes helps out.[114] Takaya said in an author's note that Shiraki is "possibly sad" that she is a woman and "secretly insecure of how tall she is," but since Hatori Sohma is tall too, they "might look pretty good together as a tall couple."[163]

Shiraki is best friends with Kana, Hatori's former fiancee, and through her met Hatori, Shigure, and Ayame two years before the series begins. While Shiraki was attracted to Hatori, she was glad that Kana and Hatori were happy together. She dated Shigure for a month before breaking up, partly because Shigure was distant and partly because she was only dating him to alleviate her loneliness. She was at a loss when Kana and Hatori broke up, because Hatori had erased Kana's memory of the engagement.[113] Shiraki still has feelings for Hatori, but resents Shigure's continuing interference in her life, even when it brings her closer to Hatori.[114] In the final chapter, Shiraki and Hatori are shown as a couple, with Hatori inviting her on an Okinawa vacation.[31]

Mine Kuramae

Mine Kuramae (倉前 美音 Kuramae Mine?) works at Ayame Sohma's clothing store as a designer and seamstress, and lives with him in an apartment above the store.[122] She is depicted as cheerful, passionate about costuming, and determined to do anything for Ayame; she takes care of details he neglects in his enthusiasm, such as getting permission to visit Yuki's class.[164] Natsuki Takaya describes her as "an amazing person" for being able to keep up with Ayame.[165] She is especially enthusiastic about dressing girls up in her outfits, sparkling at the thought of doing so,[75][164] and she herself is always shown wearing a frilly maid's uniform. According to Ayame, Mine is someone he "can confide in,"[166] and Yuki suspects that she is aware of zodiac curse. When Ayame is freed from the curse, the first thing he does is embrace her and confess he loves her.[30] Voiced by: Miki Takahashi (Japanese), Amber Cotton (English)

Motoko Minagawa

Motoko Minagawa (皆川 素子 Minagawa Motoko?), aged 17–18, is the president of Yuki Sohma's fan club and a year ahead of him. As a devoted fan, she is depicted as obsessive and romantic. The fan club bans any member from being alone with their "prince" to keep him "safe" by preventing any one member from "stealing" him; as such, Motoko hates any girl who gets close to Yuki—in particular, Tohru Honda, Kimi Toudou, and Machi Kuragi. Motoko and the club vice-president, Minami Kinoshita, instigate multiple plots to undermine Tohru, including visiting Saki Hanajima, whom they see as protecting Tohru with her "poison waves," at home to find a weakness,[45] and arranging to have Tohru cast as Cinderella's wicked stepsister to make her behave badly.[167] In episode 18, after the first chapter ends, the doors that say the title of the series close causing her head to be stuck and her sidekicks pull her out in the process. The few times Motoko does speak with Yuki, she gets so overwrought that all she can do is talk about banal things, such as what he had for breakfast.[168] At her graduation, she finally confesses to Yuki that she loves him, though she knows she cannot have him, and wishes him happiness in the future. [169] Voiced by: Kaori Shimizu (Japanese), Jamie Marchi (English)

Minami Kinoshita

Minami Kinoshita (木之下 南?) is the vice president of Yuki Sohma's fan club. Her hair is in pigtails. A classmate of Tohru's but often picks fights with her and receives Saki Hanajima's waves. She played the wicked stepmother during the play "Sorta Cinderella". She is voiced by Libby Smith in the English language version, and Harumi Asai in the original Japanese version.

Mio Yamagishi

Mio Yamagishi (山岸 美緒?) is another member of Yuki's fan club. Her hair is black and curly. She's in the same class as Momiji.

Rika Aida

Rika Aida (相田リカ?) is one of Motoko's classmates. She claims she can pick any lock, which immediatley catches Motoko's attention. She is seen n the episode "Prince Yuki Fan Club". She has a tan colored hair tied up in a ribbon.

Kimi Todo

Kimi Todo (藤堂 君 Tōdō Kimi?), aged 16–17, is one of the two student council secretaries during Yuki Sohma's presidency. She appears only in the manga. Kimi is depicted as an outgoing and fun-loving young woman.[170] She is also manipulative and a mischief-maker: when Yuki first meets her, she manipulates him into sharing chocolates his fan club had just given to him.[34] She often gives things naughty interpretations, and uses sex appeal to get her way—for example, she flirts with a teacher to get him to give the student council a new whiteboard.[70] According to Kakeru Manabe, Kimi likes to seduce boys who already have girlfriends.[171] According to an author's note, Kimi believes all men love her, and as long as they like her she can go out with as many people as she wants.[172] She once tells the other student council members that she was encouraged to become the way she is by some girls once saying that if you have a pretty face, people are more willing to forgive you. Kimi sometimes speaks in third person, as in "Kimi wants this," which is a childish way of speaking in Japanese, and calls Yuki by the cutesy nickname Yun-Yun. She is good friends with Manabe and disliked by most of the girls in the school, especially Yuki's fan club. Voiced by: Yukari Tamura (Drama CD)

Naohito Sakuragi

Naohito Sakuragi (桜木 直人 Sakuragi Naohito?), aged 15–16, is the second of the two student council secretaries during Yuki Sohma's presidency. He appears only in the manga. When he meets Yuki, he claims he is Yuki's "rival"[34] because he has a secret crush on Motoko Minagawa, president of the Yuki's fan club.[169] Naohito is depicted as a no-nonsense and short-tempered young man who is frequently angered by Kakeru Manabe and Kimi Toudou's antics, and the author noted that she never drew him smiling.[173] He works hard at his student council duties and absolutely refuses to call the council the "School Defense Force," as Manabe wants. Manabe and Kimi sometimes call him Chibi-suke (chibi meaning small, and -suke being a common masculine name-ending),[34] which irritates him because he is sensitive about his short stature.[169] Voiced by: Jun Fukuyama (Drama CD)

References

  1. ^ "フルーツバスケット 23件中21~23件 [Fruits Basket 21-23 volume of 23]" (in Japanese). Hakusensha. http://www.s-book.net/plsql/slib_series?tid=459217161&img=1&seq=&page=2. Retrieved August 5, 2009. 
  2. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (August 10, 2004). Jake Forbes. ed. Fruits Basket, Volume 4. Alethea Nibley and Athena Nibley (translators). Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-606-4. 
  3. ^ "フルーツバスケット [Fruits Basket]" (in Japanese). TV Tokyo. http://www.tv-tokyo.co.jp/anime/fruits_basket/naiyou/story.html. Retrieved August 9, 2009. 
  4. ^ "Available Issues for FRUITS BASKET". Chuang Yi. Archived from the original on January 19, 2008. http://web.archive.org/web/20080119100936/http://www.chuangyi.com.sg/new/ecatalogtitle.php?title=FRUITS+BASKET. Retrieved February 19, 2008. 
  5. ^ "Fruits Basket (Manga) Vol 23 (Final)". Madman Entertainment. http://b2b.madman.com.au/actions/catalogue.do?method=view&releaseId=7821. Retrieved February 19, 2008. 
  6. ^ "Fruits Basket". Tokyopop. http://www.tokyopop.com/product/1194. Retrieved February 19, 2008. 
  7. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (August 10, 2004). "Interview with Takaya-sensei Part 2". Fruits Basket, Volume 4. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 200. ISBN 978-1-59182-606-4. "I kept thinking there wouldn't be enough time, but it all came to me inside my head. Tohru just appeared and said "Hello!" The rest came together pretty easily after that." 
  8. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (September 11, 2007). "Natsuki Takaya Written Interview". Fruits Basket Fan Book - Cat. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 36. ISBN 978-14-2780-293-4. 
  9. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (September 11, 2007). "Natsuki Takaya Written Interview". Fruits Basket Fan Book - Cat. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 37. ISBN 978-14-2780-293-4. 
  10. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (September 11, 2007). "Natsuki Takaya Written Interview Part 2". Fruits Basket Fan Book - Cat. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 172. ISBN 978-14-2780-293-4. "One thing I do, although it isn't really an "origin" for names, is give masculine names to female characters to balance them out. That's what I did with Tohru." 
  11. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (September 11, 2007). "Natsuki Takaya Written Interview". Fruits Basket Fan Book - Cat. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 36. ISBN 978-14-2780-293-4. 
  12. ^ Quoted in Takaya, Natsuki (September 11, 2007). "Yuki Sohma". Fruits Basket Fan Book - Cat. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 48. ISBN 978-14-2780-293-4. "There's no particular reason why he likes and wears Chinese-style clothes—I just like Chinese clothes." 
  13. ^ Quoted in Takaya, Natsuki (September 11, 2007). "Yuki Sohma". Fruits Basket Fan Book - Cat. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 48. ISBN 978-14-2780-293-4. "When I was designing Yuki and Kyo's clothes, I deliberately chose very different styles so they could both think, "I wouldn't be caught dead in the clothes you wear—and besides, they'd look awful on me."" 
  14. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (November 23, 2007). Fruits Basket, Volume 18. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 141. ISBN 978-1-59816-862-4. 
  15. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (August 8, 2008). Fruits Basket, Volume 14. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. pp. 77, 111, and 141. ISBN 978-1-59532-409-2. 
  16. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (August 8, 2008). Fruits Basket, Volume 14. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 171. ISBN 978-1-59532-409-2. "There was one mistake in that Momiji's and Kureno's names are actually reversed ... When I was coming up with names, by the time I realized I was mistaken, it was too late. The chapter where Momitchi first shows up had already been published in Hana to Yume Magazine." 
  17. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (August 8, 2008). Fruits Basket, Volume 14. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 111. ISBN 978-1-59532-409-2. "Yuki is the exception. He doesn't have the name of a month. Nothing really sounded good, and the sound "Yuki" came into my head." 
  18. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (February 10, 2004). "Chapters 1–2". Fruits Basket, Volume 1. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-603-3. 
  19. ^ Liversidge, Ross. "10 of the Best - Fruits Basket". UK Anime Net. http://www.uk-anime.net/article.asp?IntID=14&strPageNo=1. Retrieved April 18, 2008. "We meet Tohru Honda, possibly the kindest, gentlest girl on the planet and follow how, through acts of kindness and compassion, her life takes an upward swing after the death of her mother." 
  20. ^ Chavez, Eduardo M. (June 19, 2004). "Fruits Basket Vol. #03". Anime on DVD. http://www.animeondvd.com/reviews2/manga/manga.php?manga_view=118. Retrieved April 18, 2008. "There are times where she sacrifices herself too much to make others happy, eventually causing her stress and more work." 
  21. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (June 8, 2004). "Chapter 17". Fruits Basket, Volume 3. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-605-7. 
  22. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (August 8, 2008). "Chapter 80". Fruits Basket, Volume 14. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-409-2. 
  23. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (August 7, 2007). "Chapter 99". Fruits Basket, Volume 17. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59816-799-3. 
  24. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (March 18, 2008). "Chapter 109". Fruits Basket, Volume 19. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59816-863-1. 
  25. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (February 8, 2005). "Chapter 37". Fruits Basket, Volume 7. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-402-3. 
  26. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (March 18, 2008). "Chapter 108". Fruits Basket, Volume 19. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59816-863-1. 
  27. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (August 9, 2005). "Chapter 65". Fruits Basket, Volume 11. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-406-1. 
  28. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (November 23, 2007). "Chapter 107". Fruits Basket, Volume 18. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59816-862-4. 
  29. ^ Eries, Sakura (July 9, 2007). "Fruits Basket Vol. #12". Anime on DVD. http://www.animeondvd.com/reviews2/manga/manga.php?manga_view=1156. Retrieved April 20, 2008. "Takaya is really showing Tohru's baggage and weaknesses now. That, I think, makes Tohru more appealing and easier to relate to than if she really were as completely carefree and optimistic as she initially appears." 
  30. ^ a b c d e f Takaya, Natsuki (March 17, 2009). "Chapter 130". Fruits Basket, Volume 22. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-4278-0683-3. 
  31. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Takaya, Natsuki (July 6, 2009). "Chapter 136". Fruits Basket, Volume 23. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-4278-0827-1. 
  32. ^ So called by several other characters starting in Takaya, Natsuki (February 10, 2004). "Chapter 1". Fruits Basket, Volume 1. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-603-3. 
  33. ^ Eries, Sakura (April 6, 2006). "Fruits Basket Vol. #07". Anime on DVD. http://www.animeondvd.com/reviews2/manga/manga.php?manga_view=1061. Retrieved April 18, 2008. "Arisa's transformation from delinquent to somewhat reformed delinquent is told quite beautifully." 
  34. ^ a b c d Takaya, Natsuki (December 13, 2005). "Chapter 66". Fruits Basket, Volume 12. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-407-8. 
  35. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (February 8, 2005). "Chapters 40–41". Fruits Basket, Volume 7. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-402-3. 
  36. ^ a b c d Takaya, Natsuki (April 4, 2004). "Chapter 7". Fruits Basket, Volume 2. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-604-0. 
  37. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (July 6, 2009). "Chapter 134". Fruits Basket, Volume 23. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-4278-0827-1. 
  38. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (June 7, 2005). "Chapter 50". Fruits Basket, Volume 9. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-404-7. 
  39. ^ a b c d e f g Takaya, Natsuki (August 7, 2007). "Chapters 97–98". Fruits Basket, Volume 17. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59816-799-3. 
  40. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (March 17, 2009). "Chapter 127". Fruits Basket, Volume 22. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-4278-0683-3. 
  41. ^ a b Liversidge, Ross. "10 of the Best - Fruits Basket". UK Anime Net. http://www.uk-anime.net/article.asp?IntID=14&strPageNo=2. Retrieved April 18, 2008. "[One friend is] a Gothic Lolita psychic type (Saki) who's manners are impeccable." 
  42. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (August 7, 2007). Fruits Basket, Volume 17. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 55. ISBN 978-1-59816-799-3. "She likes shōjo manga and shōjo novels more (?) than you might expect." 
  43. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (June 7, 2005). "Chapter 51". Fruits Basket, Volume 9. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-404-7. 
  44. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (September 11, 2007). "Saki Hanajima". Fruits Basket Fan Book - Cat. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 112. ISBN 978-14-2780-293-4. 
  45. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (October 12, 2004). "Chapter 29". Fruits Basket, Volume 5. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-607-1. 
  46. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (December 13, 2005). "Chapter 71". Fruits Basket, Volume 12. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-407-8. 
  47. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (December 12, 2006). "Chapter 89". Fruits Basket, Volume 15. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59816-023-9. 
  48. ^ Hanajima and Arisa admit they are just giving him a hard time in chapter 134. Takaya, Natsuki (July 6, 2009). "Chapter 134". Fruits Basket, Volume 23. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-4278-0827-1. 
  49. ^ a b c d Takaya, Natsuki (April 10, 2007). "Chapters 90–93". Fruits Basket, Volume 16. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59816-024-6. 
  50. ^ Kimlinger, Carl (June 5, 2007). "Review: Fruits Basket GN 16". Anime News Network. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/review/fruits-basket/gn-16. Retrieved April 18, 2008. "A troubled girl, she [Kyoko] is saved from a life wasted when she meets Tohru's father, Katsuya Honda, just as his meeting her saves him from a lonely, emotionless existence." 
  51. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (August 10, 2004). "Chapter 24". Fruits Basket, Volume 4. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-606-4. 
  52. ^ Kimlinger, Carl (June 5, 2007). "Review: Fruits Basket GN 16". Anime News Network. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/review/fruits-basket/gn-16. Retrieved April 18, 2008. "It's a beautiful little story about two dangerously unstable individuals who become strangely stable when together. Their approach to family life and parenting is informed by their own failings as members of destroyed families, and the result is exactly the kind of family that would produce someone like Tohru." 
  53. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (July 1, 2008). "Chapter 119". Fruits Basket, Volume 20. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-4278-0009-1. 
  54. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (July 6, 2009). "Chapter 135". Fruits Basket, Volume 23. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-4278-0827-1. 
  55. ^ a b c d Takaya, Natsuki (April 14, 2004). "Chapter 10". Fruits Basket, Volume 2. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-604-0. 
  56. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (August 7, 2007). "Chapter 101". Fruits Basket, Volume 17. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59816-799-3. 
  57. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (December 13, 2005). "Chapter 67". Fruits Basket, Volume 12. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-407-8. 
  58. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (August 7, 2007). "Chapter 98". Fruits Basket, Volume 17. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59816-799-3. 
  59. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (August 9, 2005). "Chapter 64". Fruits Basket, Volume 11. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-406-1. 
  60. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (august 10, 2004). "Chapter 20". Fruits Basket, Volume 4. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-606-4. 
  61. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (November 11, 2008). "Chapter 121". Fruits Basket, Volume 21. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-4278-0682-6. 
  62. ^ a b "Let's Go Home". Fruits Basket. December 27, 2001. No. 26.
  63. ^ a b c d e f Takaya, Natsuki (July 1, 2008). "Chapter 115". Fruits Basket, Volume 20. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-4278-0009-1. 
  64. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (July 6, 2009). "Chapter 132". Fruits Basket, Volume 23. Los Angeles: Tokoypop. ISBN 978-1-4278-0827-1. 
  65. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (December 12, 2006). "Chapter 84". Fruits Basket, Volume 15. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59816-023-9. 
  66. ^ Eries, Sakura (February 21, 2007). "Fruits Basket Vol. #15". Anime on DVD. http://www.animeondvd.com/reviews2/manga/manga.php?manga_view=2748. Retrieved April 18, 2008. "[T]he first three chapters are devoted to Yuki's angst-filled childhood and the events that caused him to be as withdrawn as he is." 
  67. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (April 11, 2006). "Chapter 76". Fruits Basket, Volume 13. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-408-5. 
  68. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (October 12, 2004). "Chapter 28". Fruits Basket, Volume 5. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-607-1. 
  69. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (February 10, 2004). "Chapters 4". Fruits Basket, Volume 1. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-603-3. 
  70. ^ a b c d Takaya, Natsuki (April 11, 2006). "Chapter 73". Fruits Basket, Volume 13. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-408-5. 
  71. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (February 10, 2004). "Chapter 2". Fruits Basket, Volume 1. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-603-3. 
  72. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (December 12, 2006). "Chapter 86". Fruits Basket, Volume 15. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59816-023-9. 
  73. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (July 12, 2005). "Chapter 59". Fruits Basket, Volume 10. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-405-4. 
  74. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (December 12, 2006). "Chapter 85". Fruits Basket, Volume 15. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59816-023-9. 
  75. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (March 18, 2008). "Chapter 110". Fruits Basket, Volume 19. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59816-863-1. 
  76. ^ Eries, Sakura (November 29, 2006). "Fruits Basket Vol. #14". Anime on DVD. http://www.animeondvd.com/reviews2/manga/manga.php?manga_view=3171. Retrieved April 7, 2008. "However, when he learns about the true relationship between Kakeru and Machi, Yuki realizes that he has more in common with his troublesome student council acquaintances than he originally thought." 
  77. ^ Kimlinger, Carl (June 5, 2007). "Fruits Basket GN 16". Anime News Network. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/review/fruits-basket/gn-16. Retrieved April 17, 2008. "Yuki begins to form a tentative friendship with deeply damaged student council member Machi." 
  78. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (July 6, 2009). Fruits Basket, Volume 23. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 133. ISBN 978-1-4278-0827-1. 
  79. ^ Liversidge, Ross. "10 of the Best - Fruits Basket". UK Anime Net. http://www.uk-anime.net/article.asp?IntID=14&strPageNo=2. Retrieved April 18, 2008. "Kyo (the Cat), the violent, hyperactive ginger martial artist with a short fuse but a good heart" 
  80. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (August 9, 2005). "Chapter 62". Fruits Basket, Volume 11. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-406-1. 
  81. ^ Liversidge, Ross. "10 of the Best - Fruits Basket". UK Anime Net. http://www.uk-anime.net/article.asp?IntID=14&strPageNo=2. Retrieved April 4, 2008. "This animosity is aimed directly at Yuki, who may look like delicate girl, but is more than capable of defeating Kyo without so much as trying." 
  82. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (October 12, 2004). "Chapter 25". Fruits Basket, Volume 5. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-607-1. 
  83. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (November 11, 2008). "Chapter 123". Fruits Basket, Volume 21. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-4278-0682-6. 
  84. ^ a b c d Takaya, Natsuki (December 14, 2004). "Chapter 33". Fruits Basket, Volume 6. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-608-8. 
  85. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (December 14, 2004). "Chapter 32". Fruits Basket, Volume 6. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-608-8. 
  86. ^ a b c d Takaya, Natsuki (August 10, 2004). "Chapter 21". Fruits Basket, Volume 4. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-606-4. 
  87. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (July 6, 2009). Fruits Basket, Volume 23. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 47. ISBN 978-1-4278-0827-1. 
  88. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (September 11, 2007). "Shigure Sohma". Fruits Basket Fan Book - Cat. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 61. ISBN 978-14-2780-293-4. "Does he (Shigure) ever say anything that's not a lie or a joke?" 
  89. ^ Reiter, Joseph (December 17, 2007). "Fruits Basket - The Complete Collection DVD Review". http://dvd.ign.com/articles/841/841020p1.html. Retrieved April 17, 2008. "Shigure is the older, female-crazed writer who is always joking or saying inappropriate comments." 
  90. ^ a b RPL. "Manga Reviews: Fruits Basket". UK Anime Net. http://www.uk-anime.net/manga.asp?IntID=9. Retrieved December 12, 2007. 
  91. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (June 8, 2004). "Chapter 16". Fruits Basket, Volume 3. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-605-7. 
  92. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (July 12, 2005). "Chapter 54". Fruits Basket, Volume 10. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-405-4. 
  93. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (July 1, 2008). "Chapter 115". Fruits Basket, Volume 20. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-4278-0009-1. 
  94. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (September 11, 2007). "Shigure Sohma". Fruits Basket Fan Book - Cat. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 60. ISBN 978-14-2780-293-4. "'Sort of getting into the spirit of things' is really just another of his games, as if he's proving he's not committed to anything." 
  95. ^ a b c d e f Takaya, Natsuki (August 8, 2008). Fruits Basket, Volume 14 :). Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 141. ISBN 978-1-59532-409-2. 
  96. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (April 10, 2007). Fruits Basket, Volume 16. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. pp. 49 and 75. ISBN 978-1-59816-024-6. "Why is it so fun drawing girly girls?" 
  97. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (September 11, 2007). "Natsuki Takaya Written Interview". Fruits Basket Fan Book - Cat. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 38. ISBN 978-14-2780-293-4. "Kagura is the boar so she charges ahead" 
  98. ^ a b c d Takaya, Natsuki (December 13, 2005). "Chapter 68". Fruits Basket, Volume 12. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-407-8. 
  99. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (February 10, 2004). "Chapters 5". Fruits Basket, Volume 1. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 153. ISBN 978-1-59182-603-3. 
  100. ^ "Here Comes Kagura!". Fruits Basket. July 26, 2001. No. 4.
  101. ^ a b c d Takaya, Natsuki (July 1, 2008). "Chapter 114". Fruits Basket, Volume 20. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-4278-0009-1. 
  102. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (April 10, 2007). Fruits Basket, Volume 16. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. pp. 49 and 75. ISBN 978-1-59816-024-6. 
  103. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (December 12, 2006). Fruits Basket, Volume 15. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. pp. 139 and 169. ISBN 978-1-59816-023-9. 
  104. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (August 10, 2004). "Chapter 19". Fruits Basket, Volume 4. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-606-4. 
  105. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (March 18, 2008). "Chapter 111". Fruits Basket, Volume 19. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59816-863-1. 
  106. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (August 10, 2004). "Chapter 23". Fruits Basket, Volume 4. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-606-4. 
  107. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (April 11, 2006). "Chapter 74". Fruits Basket, Volume 13. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-408-5. 
  108. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (July 1, 2008). "Chapter 116". Fruits Basket, Volume 20. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-4278-0009-1. 
  109. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (October 12, 2004). "Chapter 30". Fruits Basket, Volume 5. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-607-1. 
  110. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (December 12, 2006). Fruits Basket, Volume 15. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. pp. 81 and 109. ISBN 978-1-59816-023-9. 
  111. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (October 12, 2004). "Chapter 26". Fruits Basket, Volume 5. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-607-1. 
  112. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (April 14, 2004). "Chapter 12". Fruits Basket, Volume 2. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-604-0. 
  113. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (July 12, 2005). "Chapter 56". Fruits Basket, Volume 10. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-405-4. 
  114. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (July 12, 2005). "Chapter 57". Fruits Basket, Volume 10. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-405-4. 
  115. ^ a b c d e Takaya, Natsuki (August 8, 2008). Fruits Basket, Volume 14. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 111. ISBN 978-1-59532-409-2. 
  116. ^ a b In an interview, Takaya indicated the visual pun is deliberate. Takaya, Natsuki (November 11, 2007). "Natsuki Takaya Written Interview". Fruits Basket Fan Book - Cat. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 38. ISBN 978-14-2780-293-4. "Cattle are black and white, so there's White Haru and Black Haru" 
  117. ^ Chavez, Eduardo M. (June 19, 2004). "Fruits Basket Vol. #03". Anime on DVD. http://www.animeondvd.com/reviews2/manga/manga.php?manga_view=118. Retrieved April 18, 2008. ""White Haru" might be sweet, sensitive and a little curious; "Black Haru" is violent, loud and an instigator for trouble." 
  118. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (November 23, 2007). "Chapter 105". Fruits Basket, Volume 18. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59816-862-4. 
  119. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (November 23, 2007). Fruits Basket, Volume 18. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. pp. 79 and 115. ISBN 978-1-59816-862-4. 
  120. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (June 8, 2004). "Chapter 13". Fruits Basket, Volume 3. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-605-7. 
  121. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (November 23, 2007). Fruits Basket, Volume 18. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 177. ISBN 978-1-59816-862-4. 
  122. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (March 18, 2008). Fruits Basket, Volume 19. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. pp. 77, 111, and 141. ISBN 978-1-59816-863-1. 
  123. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (August 10, 2004). "Chapter 22". Fruits Basket, Volume 4. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-606-4. 
  124. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (December 14, 2004). "Chapter 36". Fruits Basket, Volume 6. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-608-8. 
  125. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (December 14, 2004). Fruits Basket, Volume 6. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 39. ISBN 978-1-59182-608-8. "Like Momiji, I put a lot of my own preferences into Kisa. It's really fun to draw her. I'm a real girly-girl at heart, so I would have liked to try wearing flowy dresses or maid outfits at least once." 
  126. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (October 12, 2004). "Chapter 27". Fruits Basket, Volume 5. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-607-1. 
  127. ^ "It's Because I've Been Loved That I've Become Stronger". Fruits Basket. October 25, 2001. No. 17.
  128. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (July 1, 2008). "Chapter 118". Fruits Basket, Volume 20. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-4278-0009-1. 
  129. ^ a b Eries, Sakura (May 3, 2006). "Fruits Basket Vol. #08". http://www.animeondvd.com/reviews2/manga/manga.php?manga_view=405. Retrieved April 17, 2008. "Ritsu is definitely his mother's child, having panic attacks at every little perceived transgression." 
  130. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (June 8, 2004). "Chapter 18". Fruits Basket, Volume 3. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-605-7. 
  131. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (November 11, 2007). Fruits Basket, Volume 18. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. pp. 49 and 79. ISBN 978-1-59816-862-4. 
  132. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (April 12, 2005). "Chapter 44". Fruits Basket, Volume 8. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-403-0. 
  133. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (April 12, 2005). "Chapter 45". Fruits Basket, Volume 8. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-403-0. 
  134. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (September 11, 2007). "All You Need Is Love". Fruits Basket Fan Book - Cat. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 186. ISBN 978-14-2780-293-4. 
  135. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (April 11, 2006). Fruits Basket, Volume 13. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 17. ISBN 978-1-59532-408-5. 
  136. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (December 13, 2005). Fruits Basket, Volume 12. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 168. ISBN 978-1-59532-407-8. 
  137. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (December 13, 2005). "Chapter 69". Fruits Basket, Volume 12. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-407-8. 
  138. ^ Eries, Sakura (November 29, 2007). "Fruits Basket Vol. #14". Anime on DVD. http://www.animeondvd.com/reviews2/manga/manga.php?manga_view=3171. Retrieved April 20, 2008. "Rin's got a sharp tongue, but despite her tough-as-nails exterior, she isn't nearly as strong or harsh as she makes herself out to be... However, the suffering Rin has endured has not hardened her; although she has no hopes for herself, she actually cares a great deal about the people around her. Her unfriendly behavior actually stems from love for Hatsuharu and an unwillingness to burden Tohru." 
  139. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (August 8, 2008). "Chapter 78". Fruits Basket, Volume 14. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-409-2. 
  140. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (November 23, 2007). "Chapter 104". Fruits Basket, Volume 18. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59816-862-4. 
  141. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (August 8, 2008). "Chapter 79". Fruits Basket, Volume 14. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-409-2. 
  142. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (November 23, 2007). "Chapter 106". Fruits Basket, Volume 18. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59816-862-4. 
  143. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (August 8, 2008). "Chapter 82". Fruits Basket, Volume 14. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-409-2. 
  144. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (July 6, 2009). "Chapter 133". Fruits Basket, Volume 23. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-4278-0827-1. 
  145. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (September 11, 2007). Fruits Basket Fan Book - Cat. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 175. ISBN 978-14-2780-293-4. "I initially thought he'd be a rooster, but then that didn't seem to fit his character, so I changed my mind." Kureno's animal form is also depicted on the back cover of volume 14.
  146. ^ a b c d e Takaya, Natsuki (July 1, 2008). "Chapter 117". Fruits Basket, Volume 20. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-4278-0009-1. 
  147. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (November 11, 2007). Fruits Basket Fan Book - Cat. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-14-2780-293-4. "It'd be stretching it to say Akki does any work (laugh). She leaves it all up to other people, like Kureno." 
  148. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (March 17, 2009). Fruits Basket, Volume 22. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 97. ISBN 978-1-4278-0683-3. 
  149. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (August 9, 2005). Fruits Basket, Volume 11. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 143. ISBN 978-1-59532-406-1. 
  150. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (April 11, 2006). Fruits Basket, Volume 13. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 139. ISBN 978-1-59532-408-5. 
  151. ^ "True Form". Fruits Basket. December 20, 2001. No. 25.
  152. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (November 11, 2008). Fruits Basket, Volume 21. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. pp. 51. ISBN 978-1-4278-0682-6. 
  153. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (July 6, 2005). "Chapter 49". Fruits Basket, Volume 9. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-404-7. 
  154. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (November 11, 2008). Fruits Basket, Volume 21. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 141. ISBN 978-1-4278-0682-6. 
  155. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (August 8, 2008). "Chapter 81". Fruits Basket, Volume 14. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-409-2. 
  156. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (March 18, 2008). "Chapters 112-113". Fruits Basket, Volume 19. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59816-863-1. 
  157. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (November 23, 2007). "Chapter 102". Fruits Basket, Volume 18. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59816-862-4. 
  158. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (November 11, 2008). "Chapter 125". Fruits Basket, Volume 21. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-4278-0682-6. 
  159. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (December 13, 2005). Fruits Basket, Volume 12. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 59. ISBN 978-1-59532-407-8. 
  160. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (July 19, 2005). Fruits Basket, Volume 10. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 74. ISBN 978-1-59532-405-4. "I don't think I ever figured out what it is that she teaches. I think she kind of fits the image of a classic lit teacher." 
  161. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (June 8, 2004). "Chapter 15". Fruits Basket, Volume 3. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59182-605-7. 
  162. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (April 12, 2005). "Chapter 43". Fruits Basket, Volume 8. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-403-0. 
  163. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (August 9, 2005). Fruits Basket, Volume 11. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 111. ISBN 978-1-59532-406-1. 
  164. ^ a b Takaya, Natsuki (December 12, 2006). "Chapter 87". Fruits Basket, Volume 15. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59816-023-9. 
  165. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (April 11, 2006). Fruits Basket, Volume 13. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 45. ISBN 978-1-59532-408-5. 
  166. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (April 12, 2005). "Chapter 47". Fruits Basket, Volume 7. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-403-0. 
  167. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (August 8, 2008). "Chapter 83". Fruits Basket, Volume 14. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-409-2. 
  168. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (February 8, 2005). "Chapter 42". Fruits Basket, Volume 7. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-402-3. 
  169. ^ a b c Takaya, Natsuki (November 23, 2007). "Chapter 103". Fruits Basket, Volume 18. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59816-862-4. 
  170. ^ In an author's note, Takaya describes her as "uselessly lively." Takaya, Natsuki (August 7, 2007). Fruits Basket, Volume 17. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 109. ISBN 978-1-59816-799-3. 
  171. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (April 11, 2006). "Chapter 77". Fruits Basket, Volume 13. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. ISBN 978-1-59532-408-5. 
  172. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (August 7, 2007). Fruits Basket, Volume 17. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. pp. 109 and 143. ISBN 978-1-59816-799-3. 
  173. ^ Takaya, Natsuki (August 7, 2007). Fruits Basket, Volume 17. Los Angeles: Tokyopop. p. 143. ISBN 978-1-59816-799-3. 

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