#my girlfriend's child manga
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
lauraagrace · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
In light of ordering volume three of My Girlfriend's Child, I thought I would share the cover of volume two!
I am SO thankful that Seven Seas published this series! It has been a favorite among the shoujo I've read this year and can imagine that I will only continue to feel that way!
5 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
Buckle up for the drama of teen pregnancy... In Japanese society?! Well, this is gonna be different 😁
0 notes
olivefishcake · 3 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Currently ongoing shoujo series im reading ✨
54 notes · View notes
mangatxt · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
my girlfriend's child / ano ko no kodomo - aoi mamoru
71 notes · View notes
dropintomanga · 10 months ago
Text
My Girlfriend's Child - The Loneliness of Teen Parents
Tumblr media
I'll admit that this is my first real shojo manga read in a very long time. I will say that this is a great title to get back into the shojo game with.
Mamoru Aoi's My Girlfriend's Child is a stand-out manga due to its coverage of an issue that is often misunderstood and/or draws a lot of shame - teen pregnancy.
My Girlfriend's Child is about a high school couple named Kawakami Sachi and Tsukishima Takara. Sachi and Takara are just your regular 16-year olds doing teenage things and learning to navigate adolescence together. However, after one intimate night together, Sachi starts to feel early signs of being pregnant. She takes a pregnancy test and discovers that she is indeed pregnant with Takara's child. The manga covers the two's suddenly complicated journey in learning how to manage their new lives with one they conceived.
What I love about the manga is how it covers Sachi's loneliness once she knows that she's pregnant. She starts to despair over how she will be able to support her child. Sachi also wonders how her education prospects will turn out. She initially thought about having an abortion and felt a great deal of shame on how to tell Takara and her family about it. In the beginning of the story, Sachi was worried about a missing cat named Nora. She somewhat compares Nora's life and the baby's life in a way as she seems to place more value in a cat's life than her own child's.
When Sachi decides to visit a clinic to inquire about an abortion and goes through an ultrasound, she starts to have second thoughts. Sachi finds comfort in Takara, who tries his earnest to be there for her and re-assures her that he'll always be by her side.
After reading the 1st 3 volumes of this manga, I decided to look up research on the mental health of pregnant teenagers. There's not a whole bunch of research on psychosocial interventions to help improve the mental health of pregnant teens or teen parents. A lot of knowledge is missing to fill in gaps for an increasingly under-served group of people.
The manga highlights how support can be helpful while complicated at the same. Takara's mother is shown to lack compassion over Sachi's pregnancy. She blames Sachi to a huge degree for putting Takara into a tough situation. Sachi's mother is happy and is somewhat conflicted on how to best help her as she knows that Sachi has to take responsibility. Sachi's older brother, Kou, tries to be very rational about the pregnancy saying that it's impossible for teenagers to take care of a child.
All of these interpersonal problems start to freak Sachi out as she remarks that there's no future where everyone will be happy. The only guarantee is Takara. I will say that Takara is refreshing because when I hear about teen pregnancy stories, the father is usually out of the picture. But Takara is there every step of the way even when he's not the one who's pregnant. He sadly has to deal with his mother's stress over his relationship with Sachi and is actually kicked out of the house, which makes him remark on how much teens still have to rely on their parents despite craving independence as adolescents.
Girls face so much more mental adversity than boys do because they're "expected" to be married before having children. That's not to say that teen fathers who do care have it that much better. They face a stigma in that they should be "wild and free" while struggling to make ends meet much earlier than they would have liked. There's many socio-ecological factors in play that affect both genders. It does not help that sex education in first-world countries is extremely lacking. Institutions in general seem to treat teenage parents as aberrations that don't deserve support. Children born to teenagers can experience health risks due to teens not being well-versed in various life skills, but people love to blame the parents for that.
I do notice that the manga provides a fresher perspective in that the child of Sachi and Takara might turn out okay. There's a lot of real-life evidence that goes against that, but I think that's because teen parents aren't given positive messaging about their experiences. It's okay for teens to want to be parents if they want to. We don't honor that enough. Parenthood is indeed stressful, but those who welcome it are able to fare better when they are willing to build the strength to do so and have others to help encourage that strength.
My Girlfriend's Child is a very thoughtful series because teen pregnancy isn't really discussed enough and there's definitely a community out there willing to support expectant teen parents. I do feel that teenagers are smarter/better than people think at times and not many people respect that enough. Birth is a part of life that can happen to anyone and teens can make the right decisions for themselves if we let them and respect their ability to do so.
12 notes · View notes
highresshojosei · 7 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
My Girlfriend’s Child by Mamoru Aoi あの子の子ども
6 notes · View notes
engshoujosei · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
My Girlfriend's Child
Volume 1 releases in English on April 25th, 2023. Ongoing.
Licensed by Seven Seas
In this poignant and critically acclaimed romantic shojo drama, a teenage couple's lives are changed forever after a positive pregnancy test. Sachi and her boyfriend Takara are your average high school couple. They go to school together, hang out, and even engage in the more intimate side of dating. However, as time passes, Sachi starts to get the feeling that something isn't right and decides to buy a pregnancy test. Later, in the bathroom of a family restaurant far from her home, she sees the two red lines that will change both her and Takara's life forever. Note: Nominated for the 47th Annual Kodansha Manga Award in 2023.
Status in Country of Origin 
5 Volumes (Ongoing)
Tags:
Award-Nominated Work
Childhood Friend/s
Established Couple
High School Student/s
Pregnancy
Teen Pregnancy
25 notes · View notes
ljaesch · 6 months ago
Text
Manga Nominees Announced for the 2024 Eisner Awards
Comic-Con International has announced the nominees for the 2024 Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards. The following manga have been nominated for the Best U.S. Edition of International Material—Asia award: #DRCL midnight children by Shin’ichi Sakamoto (based on Bram Stoker’s Dracula) (translated by Caleb Cook) Goodbye, Eri by Tatsuki Fujimoto (translated by Amanda Haley) My Picture Diary by Maki…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
2 notes · View notes
mrsgojosatoru · 6 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
EISNER AWARD NOMINEE MY GIRLFRIEND'S CHILD.
The story follows a young teenage girl as she finds out she's dealing with an unplanned pregnancy. The story is full of nuance and compassion surrounding the topic as the girl and her boyfriend try and figure out what they want to do about the pregnancy.
I also think outside of the compassion that this series displays it's also pretty informative, which I think is important for a series aimed at teenage girls. For instance: they detail the abortion process without shame or fear as they present it as an option for the protagonist to go through.
Anyways, it's a fantastic series, I highly recommend it.
2 notes · View notes
animehouse-moe · 2 years ago
Text
My Girlfriend's Child Volume 1
Tumblr media
This is a relatively quiet manga, if that makes any sense. It is a drama, and it is centered around a rather taboo topic in media. But it doesn't stretch the truth, it doesn't dramatize pieces for the sake of drama. Essentially, it does nothing to promote itself to readers, and instead focuses on telling a very strong story through this medium.
⚠️Warning: Discussion of Teenage Pregnancy Ahead⚠️
Sachi and Takara are high schoolers with their whole lives ahead of them. Though, in Sachi's eyes that comes crumbling down because of a pregnancy test and the scares that it brings with it. This manga does a great deal to address those fears, confusions, and concerns that swirl around Sachi as a teenage girl, and give what almost amounts to an example as to how significant others should handle the process.
So lets get into it, starting with the art. It's a very wispy work overall, that makes very little use of shadows or darkness, instead opting for something that's very bright and almost fades into the light. There's plenty of detail in the art, but you don't quite notice it all the time because of how faint it is. It's all very monotone, which I find interesting. Takara has darker colors in his design, as do a few other characters, but the overwhelming impression is that the art is focused on white and brighter colors. Could it be about bringing the world under Sachi's point of view versus Takara's, given the difference in color palette for the characters? It's definitely possible, but hard to say so I'll leave it as a question.
Tumblr media
The paneling and overall presentation of the manga is well done, opting for providing more information and character acting than scenery or larger spreads. It can become a little dense at times, but overall does a good job of helping better express the characters and provide more life to how they move and act. Take these pages for example.
Tumblr media
There's 8 panels total between the two pages it depicts, and effectively all it does is establish how Sachi is looking for her lost cat Nora. It shows that she's not exactly overly prepared for being out in the snow and cold to look for the cat, and that she's also very diligent and willing to search for this Nora, as she looks underneath a bench as well. I think it's a great introduction to the character and understanding how they typically act. But I will also say, that this type of paneling is evident throughout. That is to say, that the overall creativity in layouts could use some work, as it relies heavily on squares and rectangles that fill space to confine the art and the flow of the content.
Somewhere I have no complaints though is the character designs. They're as detailed as they are unique (that is to say, very), and that Mamoru Aoi is very good with facial expressions and character posing. As much as they are well defined and appealing poses, they feel equally at home when interpolated or imagined to be moving.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Moving onwards, I feel like Mamoru sensei is using the visual medium to their best extent possible. Not so much in the sense of what they present, but how. Backgrounds and smaller details are used as focus and storytelling elements. Take a scene like this one, that shows Sachi's isolation and dissociation in the moment.
Tumblr media
And a lesser detail that you'll notice is "noise", and how Sachi perceives and interacts with it. Given that we as readers can't experience this noise, it's an incredibly easy detail to miss, but one that exists as a constant in the manga.
There's some really great moments that use it as a way to isolate Sachi in her dissociation as above, but there's also examples when it's used to irritate her or cause anxiety. It's a really fine detail that adds a great deal of character to Sachi's experience. Just take this sequence as an example.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
It easily expresses Sachi's frustration with having to listen to the pot bubble and rattle around while cooking, and is a very simple sequence that gives a lot of life and detail to Sachi's character and how she's handling and processing things. And it happens quite often throughout. Mamoru's shown impressive prowess in visually building things up for readers to understand Sachi, whether they've ever experienced a pregnancy, or been an SO to someone that's been pregnant, or none of the above.
I wouldn't call it a one-two punch or anything like that, but they make sure to include and provide inklings and cues as to Sachi's behavior and demeanor. It creeps up on you rather than appearing out of nowhere, and I think when dealing with such an emotional experience, it's a really important detail to nail to the highest degree possible. Things like this scene that precedes Sachi's isolation at the restaurant that I showed earlier.
Tumblr media
It's a very simple and straightforward piece that speaks to Sachi's isolation from the moment that she thinks she's possibly pregnant. Forced to act like everything is normal and okay, all the students are shown to be hunkering down for class and settling into their normal routine, while Sachi is separated from them, in her own world, struggling by herself with this experience.
Now, moving on to the sensitive topics at hand: teenage pregnancy and teen sex. It's handled well, well enough that it's able to express those explicit aspects without being sexual or prying. It follows the journey from start to finish within this volume. Not to the point of birth or abortion or anything, but to where it leaves off. It doesn't skip a beat in depicting the fears of of being pregnant, of how society will view and treat you, how it can throw a wrench in plans for the future, how alone and scary it can be to experience it. How you go about getting tested and confirming, processing and understanding the experience.
All these pieces are expressed through Sachi incredibly well. She's not lashing out constantly or collapsing into tears at the slightest inconvenience. But those pieces are still there. She loses her temper, she's obstinate, she's emotional. She's conflicted and afraid and alone.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
I think what Mamoru sensei does best here is in explaining the process of coming to terms with a pregnancy. The constant back and forth, the fear and uncertainty that permeates it. The confusion and rushed research and conflicting opinions that change at the drop of a hat. It's incredibly well expressed in such a candid fashion. How a cat can mean the world as to how you treat a pregnancy. How simple words can mean the world one moment and then nothing the next.
Just moments like these that contextualize, and almost normalize the experience for young girls. It adds so much important life and understanding to the story.
Tumblr media
Or pieces like this, that show Sachi struggling with researching and fully understanding pregnancy and how it progresses/appears. I think the best part here is showing her uncertainty. She goes on to say that she doesn't have all the symptoms so she's unsure as to whether or not she's actually pregnant.
Tumblr media
It's just such a great depiction of the experience, that goes on to show that it can happen to anyone. And that even though it can happen to any number of people, those that experience it still struggle and suffer isolated in their own worlds. Unsure of what to do next, uncertain of what to say and how to breach the subject. It's a really candid and close expression of teenage pregnancy, and I think it's an incredibly important read for any number of people out there to help understand the issues, fears, and challenges that come with pregnancy (at any age, really), and how to handle it with your SO.
19 notes · View notes
lauraagrace · 4 months ago
Text
Who needs a new shoujosei to read?
August has so many releases to choose from based on this release calendar I made! 🤩
I hope you see one of your favorite volumes on the list and maybe even discover a new series you want to check out!
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Please note that all dates are subject to change and that almost all information (dates and covers) are directly taken from the publisher's website!
53 notes · View notes
theirishneko · 1 year ago
Text
July Manga Haul
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
19 notes · View notes
hatsumishinogu · 9 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Anoko no Kodomo Vol.8
6 notes · View notes
olivefishcake · 11 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Manga I read in 2023 ... I'm gonna start reading more new and classic manga this year !^ω^✨
54 notes · View notes
mangatxt · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
my girlfriend's child / ano ko no kodomo - aoi mamoru
46 notes · View notes
sean-gaffney · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
Kodansha Award winners announced.
Shonen: Shangri-La Frontier
Shoujo: My Girlfriend's Child
General: Skip and Loafer
6 notes · View notes