Setona Mizushiro

Setona Mizushiro
Born 23 October 1971
Fujisawa, Kanagawa
Residence Kawasaki, Kanagawa
Nationality Japanese
Occupation Manga artist
Known for dark manga with psychological themes
Website Official site

Setona Mizushiro (Japanese: 水城 せとな Hepburn: Mizushiro Setona) is a Japanese comic artist. In 1985 she participated in the publication of a dōjinshi. She remained active in that world until her debut in 1993 with the short story Fuyu ga Owarou Toshiteita (Winter Was Ending) that ran in Shogakukan's magazine, Puchi Comic.

While she is highly regarded in Japan and among the Chinese diaspora (most of her works have been licensed and translated into Chinese), she is relatively less well known in the United States and Europe because not many of her stories are licensed there, and only recently have the distributors started bringing her works to those countries. In 2008, her gender bender psychological thriller After School Nightmare won her some of the acclaim she has back home after the Young Adult Library Services Association named it one of best graphic novels for teenagers.[1] The same work was also nominated for the 2007 Eisner Award for Best U.S. Edition of International Material (Japan).[2]

Though her current drawing style is high in aesthetic value, her earlier works had less finesse. Regardless, her popularity grew largely due to her storytelling. Her works are noted for their slightly askew plots and exploration of the human psyche. Even her lighthearted Shōjo works usually have darker underlying elements. X-Day follows a group of teens whose mounting stress during senior year finals culminates in a plan to blow up their high school; the author has indicated that the series was written in response to the Columbine High School massacre.[3] In her After School Nightmare series, she explores both sexual and gender identity issues.[4] After was so successful in France that the French publisher released an exact replica of the key in the series as a limited edition gift. This led to a fierce online bidding war amongst Japanese fans, with the keys selling for outrageous prices.[5]

In 2006 she released Kyūso wa Chiizu no Yume o Miru. Keiko Takemiya, professor of Kyoto Seika University and one of the members of the Year 24 Group, called it one of the best work published of the BL genre, despite the S&M theme.[6] Widespread success has also followed critical acclaim with many readers rating the work five stars out of a possible 5 on Amazon.jp.[7]

Her series Shitsuren Shokoratie (失恋ショコラティエ Heartbroken Chocolatier) was awarded in May 2012 with the 36th Kodansha Manga Award in the category Shōjo.[8]

Her works largely involve the individual's search for authenticity, self-knowledge and personal identity, themes that mirror her favourite author Hermann Hesse's works.[5] Her works include shōjo, josei, and yaoi, and have been translated into many languages, including Chinese, English, French and German.

Works

Licensed in English as X-Day by Tokyopop, in French as X-Day by Asuka, and in German as Tag X by Tokyopop Germany
Licensed in French as Diamond Head by Asuka
Licensed in French as S by Asuka
Licensed (with sequel Sojou no Koi wa Nido Haneru) in French as Le jeu du chat et de la souris by Asuka and in German as Das Spiel von Katz und Maus by Carlsen Verlag
Licensed in English as After School Nightmare by Go! Comi, in French as L'infirmerie après les cours by Asuka, and in German as After School Nightmare by Carlsen Verlag
Licensed in French as Heartbroken Chocolatier by Asuka
Licensed in French as Black Rose Alice by Asuka and in German as Black Rose Alice by Carlsen Verlag
Licensed (as second volume of Kyūso wa Chiizu no Yume wo Miru) in French as Le jeu du chat et de la souris by Asuka and in German as Das Spiel von Katz und Maus 2 by Carlsen Verlag

References

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