Type: | manga |
Author: | Shūzō Oshimi |
Publisher: | Kodansha |
Publisher En: | Kodansha USA |
Demographic: | Shōnen |
Imprint: | Shōnen Magazine Comics |
Magazine: | Bessatsu Shōnen Magazine |
First: | April 8, 2020 |
Last: | August 9, 2023 |
Volumes: | 7 |
Volume List: |
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is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Shūzō Oshimi. It was serialized in Kodansha's Bessatsu Shōnen Magazine from April 2020 to August 2023, with its chapters collected in seven tankōbon volumes.
Welcome Back, Alice is about three friends, Yohei, Kei, and Yui, who are reunited in high school after Kei moves back to their town. What could have been a straightforward love triangle is complicated when Kei shows up looking and dressing like a girl.[1]
Oshimi has stated that Welcome Back, Alice is about deconstructing male sexuality, with the author drawing from personal discomfort with manhood. The manga deals with adolescent sexual awakening, love and frustration among all three main characters, and the gender identity of the character Kei, as well as Yohei later in the story. Oshimi claims to have felt the need to begin an introspective journey through "the hell of sexuality" after reading Masahiro Morioka's Confessions of a Frigid Man, and that led to Welcome Back, Alice being conceived.
Written and illustrated by Shūzō Oshimi, Welcome Back, Alice was serialized in Kodansha's shōnen manga magazine Bessatsu Shōnen Magazine from April 8, 2020, to August 9, 2023.[2] [3] Its chapters were collected in seven tankōbon volumes from October 9, 2020 to October 6, 2023. The manga is licensed in English by Kodansha USA.[4]
Welcome Back, Alice has received both praise and criticism for its portrayal of gender non-conforming people.[5] [6] Chris Cimi, in a review of the first volume, praised the manga for not treating Kei's apparent transition like something odd and bizarre and taking an upfront approach, while at the same time wishing that Oshimi had "committed harder" to explicitly describing Kei as transgender or non-binary. Cimi also describes Welcome Back, Alice as feeling like a side project compared to Oshimi's other manga.[5] Cimi also said that Oshimi's Inside Mari, despite its unrealistic premise, had a stronger impact.[5]
Rebecca Silverman, writing for Anime News Network, criticized Oshimi's Kei as an amalgam of negative stereotypes about LGBTQIA people. Specifically, she describes Kei as seeming to want nothing more than to use his gender and sexuality to tease and torment his childhood friends.[6] Jean-Karlo Lemus, also writing for ANN, stated that the manga deals with dark subjects, such as frustration and confusion, and their relationship with sexuality, as well as freedom from norms, and expressed interest in how the characters develop. He called Welcome Back, Alice a "masterful story".