Black Bird: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 33: Line 33:
* [[Duel to the Death]] - Kyo and {{spoiler|Sho}}
* [[Duel to the Death]] - Kyo and {{spoiler|Sho}}
* [[Erotic Eating]]: When Kyo buys an ice-cream cone for Misao he ends up getting some on his finger, and holds it up for her to lick. Ironically, the ladies watching the pair seem more interested.
* [[Erotic Eating]]: When Kyo buys an ice-cream cone for Misao he ends up getting some on his finger, and holds it up for her to lick. Ironically, the ladies watching the pair seem more interested.
* [[Eyes Always Shut]]: [[Downplayed]]. It's not always [[Death Glare|a threat]] when Hoki opens his eyes, [[OOC Is Serious Business|as was typical of this trope]], since he opens them more casually than some examples, but his eyes ''are'' usually closed in his resting expression.
* [[Forced to Watch]]: Kyo is threatened with this more than once.
* [[Forced to Watch]]: Kyo is threatened with this more than once.
* [[Friend to All Children]]: Kyou, surprisingly. There's a ''reason'' why he and Tarou get along really well.
* [[Friend to All Children]]: Kyou, surprisingly. There's a ''reason'' why he and Tarou get along really well.

Revision as of 08:59, 15 October 2018

Our heroine and, uh, "hero"


Black Bird is a Shoujo manga by Kanoko Sakuraouji. It tells the story of Misao Harada, an ordinary girl who can see ghosts, spirits and demons, and her relationship with Kyo, the head of a Tengu (bird demon) clan, who she befriended as a little child. Thanks to her Dangerous Sixteenth Birthday, if a demon makes Misao his bride (which is implied to have more to do with sex than it does with nuptials), their clan would become prosperous; on the other hand, if a demon eats her flesh, it will gain immortality. Poor Misao is therefore caught between Kyo, who wants to marry her (against her will, if necessary), and various other badnasties who want to eat her. Romance, uh, ensues.

Not to Be Confused With the Beatles song of the same name from the White Album.


Tropes used in Black Bird include: