Millennium Snow | |
Ja Kanji: | 千年の雪 |
Ja Romaji: | Sennen no Yuki |
Type: | manga |
Author: | Bisco Hatori |
Publisher: | Hakusensha |
Demographic: | Shōjo |
Magazine: | LaLa, LaLa DX |
First: | July 2001 |
Last: | December 10, 2013 |
Volumes: | 4 |
, also known as A Thousand Years of Snow, is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Bisco Hatori. It was originally serialized in Hakusensha's LaLa magazine from July 2001 to May 2002, and later resumed in the January 2013 issue of LaLa DX and ended in the December 2013 issue. The story focuses on a sickly teenage girl and a vampire who can save her life. Millennium Snow is licensed in English for release in North America, Australia and Southeast Asia.
Millennium Snow focuses on Chiyuki Matsuoka, a high school girl hospitalized with a heart problem. Since birth her heart has been very weak and she was told that she would probably live to be only fifteen. However, one day she meets Tōya Kanō, a vampire, with the opposite problem: Tōya lives for about one thousand years. It's customary for a vampire at his age of eighteen to choose a human partner to be with for 1000 years who in turn would let him drink their blood and share his life span for the millennium.
Early in the series, Chiyuki offers Tōya her blood, so that she would be able to live longer, but Tōya refuses, claiming he dislikes the sight and taste of blood. In the beginning, he even looks down on humans, believing that they are weak creatures who will only die before him and leave him behind, but later on he, with the help of Chiyuki, starts to see the world in a different perspective.
Upon her first meeting with Tōya, he tells her that humans are weak. Later, they go out shopping but Chiyuki has a heart attack and is immediately sent back to the hospital. When they return to the hospital, she believes she is finally dying and tells him not to be sad if she dies because other people out there need him. Distraught, he saves her by giving her a little bit of his blood. Since then, Chiyuki's health has improved to the point when she starts attending school again but is adamant to stay with him. The effects are not permanent as he tells her that it's only a matter of time before her heart fails her again.
The main reason Tōya does not want to look for a partner is that he would not want to force anyone to live for a thousand years as he sees it as more of a curse than a blessing. He often puts on the facade that he's a tough guy, but in reality he's quite the opposite. He extremely dislikes Satsuki. As noted by Yamimaru, he is just jealous that he and Chiyuki have become so close because he cares for Chiyuki more than anyone else. Eventually, he starts to fall in love with Chiyuki.
Satsuki lives with his grandmother and has been able to gain a lot of her wisdom because of it. Similar to Tōya, he is not a human but in fact a werewolf. It is due to this that he constantly tries to appear as a normal person. If he didn't, he would always feel very insecure about him being a werewolf. He also seems to care a lot for Chiyuki and likes to protect (as well as flirt with) her to annoy Tōya. Later, he too starts to develop feelings for Chiyuki.
Millennium Snow is written and illustrated by Bisco Hatori. The manga was originally serialized in Hakusensha's LaLa magazine between the July 2001 and May 2002 issues,[1] [2] and was later collected into two tankōbon volumes published from November 2001 to August 2002. A special chapter titled was released in the July 2002 issue of LaLa DX. The manga resumed in the January 2013 issue of LaLa DX,[3] and ended in the December 2013 issue.[4] Millennium Snow is licensed in English for release in North America by Viz Media, and in New Zealand and Australia by Madman Entertainment.[5] Chuang Yi has licensed the series in English and Mandarin.[6]
Millennium Snow was positively received by readers. The first volume of the English-language release appeared at the fourth place on Publishers Weeklys list of the bestselling graphic novels for April 2007.[7] More than 20,000 copies of the first volume were sold in 2007.[8] [9] In 2013, the Japanese edition of volume three sold an estimated 27,582 copies for the week of August 5–11, with an estimated 27,765 copies sold in all.[10]
In his review of the first Millennium Snow volume, Anime News Network's Theron Martin felt that the character designs "not only have the typical ridiculously lanky look but simply aren't very appealing despite her efforts to portray Toya and Satsuki as bishonen studs." Martin liked the unrelated bonus story at the end of the volume, calling it "exquisitely beautiful and melancholy".[11] Millennium Snow ranked sixth on About.com's 2007 Reader's Poll for Best New Shojo Manga.[12]