Ja Kanji: | ひと夏のKIDSゲーム |
Ja Romaji: | Hito Natsu no KIDS Gēmu |
Genre: | Romance |
Type: | manga |
Author: | Ken Akamatsu |
Publisher: | Kodansha |
Demographic: | Shōnen |
Magazine: | Magazine Fresh |
Published: | September 10, 1993 |
is a short, debut manga work[1] [2] [3] by Ken Akamatsu, the creator of Love Hina. The manga was published on September issue of Kodansha’s Magazine Fresh on September 10, 1993. Ken Akamatsu later received Kodansha’s "Freshman Manga Award" (Japanese: Japanese: 新人漫画賞/Japanese: 少年マガジン新人賞) and Special Jury Award (Japanese: Japanese: 審査員特別賞) for this work.[4] The manga was re-published on 20 May 2001.
The narrative revolves around a high school student named Shinya Matsumoto and his love story, which takes place in the summer vacation. Shinya unexpectedly encounters a car accident, which results in a mother and son being taken to a hospital. The son, Daisuke Kirishima, is completely fine while his mother, Reiko Kirishima must stay in the hospital for three weeks and is unable to look after her son thereafter. Reiko’s younger sister, Yuki Kirishima, visits the hospital but she turns out to be Shinya’s classmate and love interest. Yuki, who needs to care for Daisuke Kirishima, faces problematic situation as there is no place for Daisuke to settle down. Shinya suggests that he will provide room for Daisuke to live and Yuki visits his house on regular basis to care for them. Shinya then starts a romantic relationship with Yuki.
The manga title literally means "one summer's kids' game". The original title is, which means "summer vacation only parents". But the original title was eventually rejected for being criticized by the editors.[5]
The manga won the 50th Freshman Manga Award and Special Jury Award (1993)
This is Akamatsu's first manga work to be published by a mainstream manga magazine and Akamatsu received the Shōnen Magazine Freshman Award for this work. It not only encouraged Akamatsu to become a manga artist, but also drew attentions from manga editors. Akamatsu was inspired by the plans of manga editors and this led to the creation of his later work A.I. Love You.[6]