HOSHI FURU OUKOKU NO NINA
STATUS
RELEASING
VOLUMES
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RELEASE
Invalid Date
CHAPTERS
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DESCRIPTION
Nina had a rough start to life, stealing to survive—and eventually being sold into slavery by her own brother. But to her surprise, her captor, Prince Azure, ordained that she would live the life of a princess...specifically, that of the recently deceased princess-priestess, Alisha. But despite her changing fortune, Nina won't give up her old life without a fight...and Azure might just be the one to finally match her wits. But how much can she trust Azure? And can she stop the feelings budding in her heart, knowing she must eventually marry another...?
(Source: Kodansha USA)
Note: Won the 46th Annual Kodansha Manga Award for Best Shoujo Manga.
CAST
Sett
Nina
Azure Fortna
Neena
Ann
Hikami
Muhulum
Klimina
Mea
Fortna Ou
Colin
Fohnam
Bidoh
Vogue Kyou
Nina no Chichi
Dytus
Shigan
Saji
Nina no Haha
Yor
Fortna Ouhi
Dai Joukou
Toat
Gainan
Konoe Taichou
CHAPTERS
RELATED TO HOSHI FURU OUKOKU NO NINA
REVIEWS
bufis
95/100one of the best josei/shoujo fantasy manga; a true hidden gemContinue on AniListnote: spoiler-free review
“Nina the Starry Bride” is a hidden gem that I stumbled upon almost by mistake; and what a fortunate mistake it was! It is one of the best josei/shoujo fantasy manga I have ever come across. It does seem criminally underrated, though; so here I am with a review, to make it justice!
STORY - 10
Nina is a girl that lives with her family, like any other girl her age. Well, except for the fact that her “family” consists only of two poor children, which she calls her “brothers”. Their sole chance to survive is to steal— be it jewelry or other valuables from rich people. Even so, their lives are quite enjoyable, and they are actually having fun, all because they are together. And when you are together with the people you love, you are happy, right?
Well, yes, that's true. However, one day, the little brother gets sick. Life may have been hard until this point, but now it was hard and painful. After all, they could do nothing to help the boy. At least, until the older brother found a solution to get the money he needed for the medicine: to sell Nina to the slave traders. Luckily for her, though, instead of being sold into slavery, she becomes the replacement of the recently-deceased princess of the kingdom, as to cover the mistake of those who failed to save her.
It is a great story, always managing to somehow keep you on your toes. As much as I want to tell you even more about it, this is supposed to be a spoiler-free review; so I'll hold back. What I can say, though, is that it won't disappoint; and be ready for some pure, strong, real romance.
ART - 9
The art is amazing, it is such a good fit for the style and atmosphere of the story. It is rather lovely and adds a lot to the charm of the manga. The covers, especially, looked very nice, they had starry, fantasy-like ornaments, and the beginning of the chapters had those as well.
CHARACTERS - 9
Great characters, they are surprisingly complex and feel real. I could probably meet some people with a number of their traits in real life. Also, the chemistry between the main characters is off the charts, really. I don't even know them personally (and it is not like I could ever do that), but I can see how strong their bond is, even if all I know is from some chapters of a book.
The protagonist, Nina, has a very strong, unpolished personality; at the beginning, she is a stubborn brat and remains that way. Make no mistake, though, it is quite the positive trait in her case; for she is unafraid and ready to do anything for the people she loves. Nina grows a lot as a person and as a princess, and we love to see it! She is honestly such a nice character, a very caring and strong girl; and I admire her devotion.
Also, she reminds me of Yona from Yona of the Dawn.
ENJOYMENT/OVERALL
Nina the Starry Bride was definitely one of my most fun, thrilling reads in the past few months. I was actually really surprised myself by how much fun I had while reading it. I strongly recommend it. 20/10 for enjoyment
bazazilio
95/100a bizarre manga with messed-up but painfully relatable characters who chase phantom life purposes in search of meaningContinue on AniList"Nina the Starry Bride" was the first manga that I read 100% in Japanese, and I read the bulk of it in the span of a week or so, spending hours every day reading. It was so addictive that I would read it even when my head was hurting from reading too many kanji. I could not put it down. And in the following months, while I was waiting for a new tome to come out, I found myself thinking about it again and again. It really is a strange story, too cruel to be a fairytale and yet too impossible and extreme at times to not be one; it is at the same time dark and lighthearted, unsettling and charming.
The manga follows Nina, a girl abducted to replace a recently deceased princess, Alisha, who was supposed to marry a prince of the neighboring country to prevent a war. Nina hasn't been given much of a choice, really, but her life before has been kind of a hell; she has no one to care for and no one to care for her, so since "nice people" are
orderingasking, she decides to go along with it. Her life is empty anyway.It's definitely the characters that make this story shine; there's clearly something wrong with all of them, even if they seem fine at first. Watching their relationships grow and change is like watching a train wreck—it's wrong, but you can't take your eyes off it. And these characters have so much unexpected depth that they even managed to fool me.
Our protagonist Nina seems like such a bright and somewhat sillily optimistic character, but her optimism is tinted with desperation. You can't help but admire her strong will and her ability to take anything thrown at her with almost a smile, but that ability comes from her having lived through many traumatic experiences and then suppressing all of them away in her head. She is strong and yet always on the verge of breaking, because this manga gives her no time to pause or reflect. She's so empty and broken that when her captor gives her a mission, she enthusiastically accepts that mission as her life's purpose because she literally has no other purpose or dreams to keep her going. But on the outside, she seems like your regular overly cheery and happy person.
And then there are the other characters. We have Azure, who treats himself and people around him as means to achieve goals he doesn't even truly care about; he is duty-bound yet selfish. He exerts himself for the sake of the country, yet that exertion is somewhat egocentric, as he has merged his identity with his duty to a point where he can't separate the two. He is cold, calculating, and cruel, yet he has a charming streak of kindness and nobleness to him that makes him seem like such a nice guy. Azure is empty, but he was told he has a country to protect, and that phantom purpose almost makes him feel whole.
And then there is Seth, who is just madness incarnated, a black empty void of a person. He's unpredictable and casually cruel; he can kill a person without batting an eye. And yet, in his empty despair, he has the most potential out of all the other characters because he is the only one who doesn't lie to himself. He has given up on everything and everyone and believes he is beyond saving and that the world would be just better off if it burned. He thinks that there can be no real human connection that isn't selfish or obsessive, which is why he's given up on people. He is crazy and cynical, yet refreshingly honest. He also has the prettiest white lashes, and man, it's unfair.
What these characters have in common is that they are all terribly lonely and all feel somewhat estranged from their own lives since everything has already been decided for them. They are encouraged to live to fulfil someone else's goals for the sake of duty or live according to someone else's beliefs. Not only does this estrangement make them mentally unwell, but it also forces them to look for ways to compensate for it, to try to find some personal meaning in the cards they've dealt. It could be by feverishly chasing those phantom purposes that are assigned to them by others or by trying to find fulfillment in the relationships with people around them. Or, in the case of Nina, both. When you are empty yourself, it's easy to choose to live for the sake of somebody else, to exert yourself to attain what you imagine to be their happiness. But that sort of care and altruism is not always as noble as it might seem at first—it might be a form of catharthic self-destruction, because in the end, by striving to make someone "happy," you might end up doing exactly the opposite.
So can this masochistic phantom attachment be called "love"? They say love is blind and all, but why is it blind and how is it blind? Could it be that someone who is very lonely can catch feelings for literally anyone who shows them enough kindness and compassion? Those questions are explored in one of the truest love triangles ever written, which is 100% guaranteed to make the characters and the reader suffer no matter how it ends. What makes it even more intense is that both sides of the love triangle are anti-heroes, and they both seem like horrible people at first glance
(and at second, too). And the three of them crave human connection so much that it makes their feelings for each other selfish and unhealthy. But sometimes we can see glimpses of something genuine in this vortex of self-deception, some real connection there, but the story takes so many unexpected twists and turns that it scatters those feelings around and reassembles them in new, confusing ways over and over again.This manga is truly bizzare sometimes and is full of contradictions — characters' motivations are obviously messed up, but painfully relatable, their feeligns for each other are just tools to compensate for their own loneliness and yet they are fascinatingly contagious and feel real. Nina's feverish enthusiasm for her "life purpose" is somewhat unsettling, and yet her perseverance is admirable. No matter how you look at it, Nina is powerless, the only thing that she has except for her own free will is a name that doesn't even belong to her — and yet it's Nina who drives the story forward, making her own choices even when she's been robbed of all options, constantly re-fraiming her circumstances and finding meaning and the will to live when all seems lost.
I love this story to pieces; it makes me happy and yet breaks my heart all the time. It's dark, but cheery, cruel from the first chapter, but even cozy at times. I should hate some of the characters, but instead I get carried away sympathising with them. This manga is so well thought out, and it reveals layers and layers of meaning with every new tome, making me think that maybe we can change the world and the people around us with nothing but will and wishes, even while chasing silly phantom purposes.
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SCORE
- (3.8/5)
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