Stepping on Roses

Stepping on Roses

The cover of the first tankōbon volume of Stepping on Roses as published by Shueisha, featuring Sumi and Soichiro.
裸足でバラを踏め
Genre Romance, Drama, Historical
Manga
Written by Rinko Ueda
Published by Shueisha
English publisher Viz Media
Demographic Shōjo
Magazine Margaret
Original run 2007 – ongoing
Volumes 7
Anime and Manga Portal

Stepping on Roses (裸足でバラを踏め Hadashi de Bara wo Fume?, lit. Stepping on Roses Barefoot) is a Japanese shōjo manga series written and illustrated by Rinko Ueda. The series began serialization in Margaret magazine in 2007 and is ongoing. The individual chapters have been collected into seven tankōbon volumes by Shueisha as of May 2011; the first on April 25, 2008 and the most recent on May 24, 2011.[1][2] The series has been licensed by Viz Media for an English-language North American release as part of their Shojo Beat imprint.

Contents

Plot

The year is Meji 25 and Sumi Kitamura is incredibly poor and her brother keeps bringing even more children home to feed. Her brother is a womanizer and a gambler so they are always in debt. When her adopted sister, Tomi, became ill a strange man gave her money in a handkerchief to buy medicine. When a debt collector turns up at their house demanding 2000 yen her brother is nowhere to be found. The man says that he will take away all of Sumi's younger siblings and sell them in to slavery. Desperate to save her siblings Sumi goes to the red light district in an attempt to raise the money in one night. Just when she thinks there's no more hope, a man named Soichiro Ashida appears and says that he will buy her. Sumi goes with him only to find that he was paying her to marry him! They immediately go to the church and afterwards he says that he'll pay for anything she could possibly want but, the one catch is that she has to marry him and not fall for him. It's shown the reason for him to marry so quickly, is to inherit property. They go visit Soichiro's best friend, Nozomu Ijuin. Sumi is shocked to find that it's the same man who helped her before. Sumi still harbors feelings for him, and through the visit he falls in love with her too. But Sumi draws back knowing she is now Soichiro's wife.

Characters

Sumi Ashida (née Kitamura) (北村 純 Kitamura Sumi?)
The series' protagonist. Sumi is a young woman in the lowest levels of poverty until she marries Soichiro. She is an incredibly kind girl. Although she is married to Soichiro, she seems to have had feelings for Nozomu. After Sumi and Nozomu elope together she sees a different side to him. Soichiro comes to rescue Sumi and Nozomu from a fire and after that Sumi begins to fear Nozomu. Sumi is generally headstrong and rather dense, but is a master of shogi as well as being a good cook. When Soichiro chooses her over money, she is happy, but they become poor. It is revealed that the reason why she hates the scent of roses is because she was abandoned in a rose garden as a baby, making Eisuke not her biological brother. To help her family, she becomes Nozomu's fiance. When Soichiro hears about this, he goes to her, but she tells him that now that he is poor, she no longer needs him. Later she tells Soichiro that she still loves him and begins working on a plan to give him back his position as company president.
Soichiro Ashida (芦田 蒼一郎 Ashida Sōichirō?)
Sumi's husband; He marries Sumi to get his inheritance. He is a childhood friend of Nozomu. He is a Tsundere. Soichiro is afraid of big fires and will scream and even cry, this being due to a traumatic event when he was a child, where his parents and younger half-brother died. Soichiro is quick to assume and can be selfish, but seems to be learning to genuinely care for Sumi. Even though he said they will not love each other, he falls for Sumi. He originally planned to just use Sumi as a set up to get money from Nozomu's family, but her kindness put him in a soft spot. When the truth about Sumi is discovered, he chooses to live with her. He gets mad that Nozomu gave Sumi money, not wanting to have pity taken on him. He is shocked when Sumi tells him she wants money more than him and never wants to see him again. Later Sumi tells him the reason why she left him for Nozomu.
Nozomu Ijuin (伊集院 望 Ijūin Nozomu?)
Soichiro's childhood friend. When she was still just a poor girl, he gives Sumi money within a handkerchief, in order to get medicine for her adopted sister Tomi. When he next meets her as Soichiro's wife, he almost recognizes her, but is easily led to believe that she is a completely different person. He later become completely obsessed with Sumi, to the point of kidnapping her. Despite later being married himself, to a woman of his parent's choosing, he asks Sumi to run away with him. He is very skilled in art. He bought a second house away from his wife Miu, which he uses as an art studio. Later, he steals Soichiro's position as company president and Sumi, as well. He becomes a Yandere character.
Komai (駒井 Komai?)
Soichiro's butler since he was a child. Komai quit his job because Soichiro didn't believe him when he claimed that Keiko had put poison in his food. Afraid to face his parents after quitting, Komai lives with Sumi's family, taking care of the young children. Nozomu laters hires Komai to be his butler. Soichiro calls him a traitor when he offers him money.
Eisuke Kitamura (北村 英輔 Kitamura Eisuke?)
Sumi's older brother, who has a terrible problem with gambling; Any money he makes, he ends up wasting rather than than using it for his siblings or for paying rent. He gets a job at Soichiro's company and does manage to pay 10 years worth of the bills. However, It is later revealed that Eisuke brings home so many abandoned children to Sumi because she once asked for more siblings, though she herself doesn't remember this. He tells everyone that Sumi is his little sister, causing him to lose all his money and bring Soichiro to poverty. It is revealed that Sumi and Eisuke are not really related; he found her in a rose garden as a baby and brought her up as his sister.

Media

Manga

Written and drawn by Rinko Ueda, the Stepping on Roses manga began serialization in the shōjo manga magazine Margaret in 2007. The series is still running in the same magazine as of October 2010.[n 1] At their panel at Anime Expo 2009, Viz Media announced they had licensed the series for North America as part of their Shojo Beat imprint.[3][4]

Volume List

No. Japan North America
Release date ISBN Release date ISBN
01 April 25, 2008[1] ISBN 978-4-08-846283-7 April 6, 2010[5] ISBN 1-4215-3182-8
02 August 25, 2008[6] ISBN 978-4-08-846322-3 July 6, 2010[7] ISBN 1-4215-3183-6
03 November 25, 2008[8] ISBN 978-4-08-846351-3 October 2010[9] ISBN 1-4215-3237-9
04 April 24, 2009[10] ISBN 978-4-08-846398-8 January 2011[11] ISBN 1-4215-3593-9
05 March 25, 2010[12] ISBN 978-4-08-846504-3 April 2011[13] ISBN 1-4215-3942-X
06 September 24, 2010[14] ISBN 978-4-08-846567-8 July 5, 2011[15] ISBN 1-4215-3976-4
07 May 24, 2011[2] ISBN 978-4-08-846644-6

Light Novel

The series is also being adapted as a light novel, that runs in Cobalt.[16]

Reception

Deb Aoki of About.com says of the first volume that while it glosses over its Meiji Era setting's "not-so-pretty aspects", the approach works for what Ueda is doing. Overall, Aoki seems to like the series, calling it a "charming and unapologetically romantic story that will make you smile."[17] Mania.com's Julie Opipari mentions that while the series is like a Harlequin novel, which could be off-putting for some readers, it drew her into the story. She also mentions that occasionally the melodrama is a bit much, but that she "can't wait to find out" what will happen next.[18]

Volume two of the Viz edition of the manga was number 10 on the New York Times manga best-seller list in its first week of release.[19] The third volume was number 8 on the same list in its first week of release.[19]

Notes

  1. ^ The series went on hiatus at one point due to the birth of the author's son, after this, the series was only in every other issue of the magazine, making it a monthly series, instead of a bi-monthly series.

References

  1. ^ a b "裸足でバラを踏め  1" (in Japanese). Shueisha Booknavi. http://books.shueisha.co.jp/CGI/search/syousai_put.cgi?isbn_cd=978-4-08-846283-7. Retrieved 2010-03-26. 
  2. ^ a b "裸足でバラを踏め  7" (in Japanese). Shueisha Booknavi. http://books.shueisha.co.jp/CGI/search/syousai_put.cgi?isbn_cd=978-4-08-846644-6. Retrieved 2011-05-28. 
  3. ^ "Viz Media — Anime Expo 2009". Anime News Network. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/convention/2009/anime-expo/viz-media. Retrieved 2010-03-26. 
  4. ^ "Viz to Publish One Piece #24-35 in January–June 2010". Anime News Network. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2009-07-03/viz-to-publish-one-piece-no.24-53-in-january-june-2010. Retrieved 2010-03-26. 
  5. ^ "Viz Media . Products . Stepping on Roses, Vol. 1". Viz Media. http://www.viz.com/products/products.php?product_id=8708. Retrieved 2010-03-26. 
  6. ^ "裸足でバラを踏め  2" (in Japanese). Shueisha Booknavi. http://books.shueisha.co.jp/CGI/search/syousai_put.cgi?isbn_cd=978-4-08-846322-3. Retrieved 2010-03-26. 
  7. ^ "Viz Media . Products . Stepping on Roses, Vol. 2". Viz Media. http://www.viz.com/products/products.php?product_id=8709. Retrieved 2010-03-26. 
  8. ^ "裸足でバラを踏め  3" (in Japanese). Shueisha Booknavi. http://books.shueisha.co.jp/CGI/search/syousai_put.cgi?isbn_cd=978-4-08-846351-3. Retrieved 2010-03-26. 
  9. ^ "Stepping on Roses, Vol. 3". Simon & Schuster. http://books.simonandschuster.biz/Stepping-on-Roses-Vol-3/Rinko-Ueda/9781421532370. Retrieved 2010-04-11. 
  10. ^ "裸足でバラを踏め  4" (in Japanese). Shueisha Booknavi. http://books.shueisha.co.jp/CGI/search/syousai_put.cgi?isbn_cd=978-4-08-846398-8. Retrieved 2010-03-26. 
  11. ^ "Stepping on Roses, Vol. 4". Simon & Schuster. http://books.simonandschuster.biz/Stepping-on-Roses-Vol-4/Rinko-Ueda/9781421535937. Retrieved 2010-04-11. 
  12. ^ "裸足でバラを踏め  5" (in Japanese). Shueisha Booknavi. http://books.shueisha.co.jp/CGI/search/syousai_put.cgi?isbn_cd=978-4-08-846504-3. Retrieved 2010-03-26. 
  13. ^ "Stepping on Roses, Vol. 5". Simon & Schuster. http://books.simonandschuster.biz/Stepping-on-Roses-Vol-5/Rinko-Ueda/9781421539423. Retrieved 2010-08-20. 
  14. ^ "裸足でバラを踏め  6" (in Japanese). Shueisha Booknavi. http://books.shueisha.co.jp/CGI/search/syousai_put.cgi?isbn_cd=978-4-08-846567-8. Retrieved 2010-11-19. 
  15. ^ "Viz Media . Products . Stepping on Roses, Vol. 6". Viz Media. http://www.viz.com/product?id=9824. Retrieved 2011-05-28. 
  16. ^ "マーガレット編集部だより - 裸足でバラを踏め」がノベライズ化!!" (in Japanese). Margaret Magazine Blog. http://www.margaret-blog.net/staff/2010/08/post-2812.html. Retrieved 2010-08-20. 
  17. ^ "Stepping on Roses Volume 1 Manga Review". About.com. http://manga.about.com/od/vizmedia/gr/SteppingOnRoses1.htm. Retrieved 2010-03-26. 
  18. ^ "Stepping on Roses Vol. #01 Manga Review". Mania.com. http://www.mania.com/stepping-roses-vol-01_article_120834.html. Retrieved 2010-04-14. 
  19. ^ a b "New York Times Manga Best Seller List, July 4–10". Anime News Network. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2010-07-16/new-york-times-manga-best-seller-list-july-4-10. Retrieved 2010-07-16. 

External links