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Subaru recalls a life and death bet he made with Seishiro, and is frozen in shock at the revelation until his sister Hokuto comes to his aid.

160 pages, Paperback

First published March 25, 1994

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235 people want to read

About the author

Clamp

757 books3,148 followers
Ōkawa Nanase 大川七瀬
[born: 2 May 1967; Ōsaka, bloodtype: A]

Mokona Apapa もこなあぱぱ
[born: 16 Jun 1968, Kyōto; bloodtype: A]

Nekoi Mick 猫井みっく
[born: 21 Jan 1969, Kyōto; bloodtype: O]

Igarashi Satsuki 五十嵐さつき
[born: 8 Feb 1969, Kyōto; bloodtype: A]


CLAMP originally began in 1989 as a twelve-member dōjinshi circle, but by 1990, the circle had diminished from twelve to seven. Of the remaining seven, Tamayo Akiyama, Sei Nanao, and Leeza Sei left the group during the production of the RG Veda manga. Other former members of CLAMP also included Soushi Hishika, O-Kyon, Kazue Nakamori, Yuzuru Inoue and Shinya Ōmi. Currently, there are four members in the group.

In 2004, CLAMP's 15th anniversary as a mangaka group, the members changed their names from Nanase Ohkawa, Mokona Apapa, Mick Nekoi, and Satsuki Igarashi to Ageha Ohkawa, Mokona, Tsubaki Nekoi and Satsuki Igarashi (her name is pronounced the same, but written with different characters) respectively. The August 2004 issue of Newtype USA, a magazine specializing in events of the anime and manga subcultures, reported that the members of CLAMP simply wanted to try out new names. In a later interview with Ohkawa, it was revealed that initially Mokona wanted to drop her surname because it sounded too immature for her liking, while Nekoi disliked people commenting that her name was the same as Mick Jagger's. Ohkawa and Igarashi, wanting to go with the flow of Nekoi's and Mokona's name changes, changed their names as well.

In 2006, they made their first USA public debut at Anime Expo in Anaheim, California. They were well received at the convention, with 6,000 fans in attendance at their panel.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 87 reviews
Profile Image for Mir.
4,976 reviews5,330 followers
July 20, 2018
That's the end? THAT'S THE END?!


Shit. I mean... I'm not complaining, just surprised.

Although I guess as [spoiler omitted] says, "Why are you so surprised? Things like this happen every day."

Now to go read something more cheerful and optimistic, like Tomie.
Profile Image for K.S. Trenten.
Author 13 books52 followers
August 11, 2019
This is the tragic conclusion of what could be called the ultimate anti-romance (romances as a genre requiring a happy ending). No matter how beautiful, powerful, or kind you might be, you can lose in love. You can lose everything. The one you fall in love with won’t necessarily love you back, even if he was willing to go against his nature and try to love you. You may discover you love him, only to gaze into the dark heart of what he truly is, everything you’re not. He’s your enemy, your stalker, the wolf in sheep’s clothing, and he chose you as his prey. Your love never changed him.

This is what happened to Subaru or did it? For the first time, Seishiro is utterly honest with Subaru, letting the boy he selected as his beloved see the monster behind the mask. He gives Subaru every chance to strike back. Seishiro doesn’t love Subaru, but does he want to kill him? Do Subaru’s grandmother and Hokuto stop Seishiro from claiming his prey, or does Seishiro allow them to stop him?

The threesome at the heart of this manga; Subaru, Hokuto, and Seishiro separate permanently, something which broke my heart, even though it appeared inevitable. Seishiro shattered it with his revelations. Subaru allowed himself to be shattered, perhaps unable to bear being who and what he is any longer. After a lifetime of being kind to others, of giving his life and power to help others, Subaru finally finds the one person he can give his heart to, and he’s everything Subaru has spent his life fighting. Hokuto cannot bear it either, seeing what Subaru has been reduced to and she pushed Subaru into the arms of the man who broke him. In the end, she makes the ultimate sacrifice to save Subaru and Subaru is left alone, without either of the people he loved. All he has is the one thing he never loved, yet sacrificed himself for again and again, his job as an onmyouji. Perhaps there’s a warning in this. Perhaps there’s more than one message in Subaru’s final story where he drifts like a beautiful ghost from assignment to assignment, haunted by the past, his face as immobile as marble. He lives without joy in a way his sister would never approve of, but his choices are not hers. Nor is he responsible for hers. As for Seishiro, what does Subaru know of his true motivations? In the despair, there is hope, a hint of more to come when Subaru faces a last story of everyday cruelty and kindness, the supernatural havoc they cause, and walks off into the streets of Tokyo, a rain of sakura petals following him.

I’ve never read anything like Tokyo Babylon. It’s so epic, casting a fairytale magic over the ordinary and the mundane, yet its main threesome walk in beauty, to quote a poet, casting an iconic spell with their unique fashion and dynamic, which struck me as so alluring and special. Not only were Subaru, Seishiro, and Hokuto too special to last, they were doomed. Doomed to a short period of time due to an enounter, a meeting of opposites beneath a bloodthirsty sakura tree. Perhaps the tree wanted more than just blood from its guardian, yet I really can’t blame the sakura or even Seishiro for all that happened. Don’t get me wrong, his cruel, yet aesthetic confrontations with Subaru and later Hokuto make him one of the most frightening villains to ever openly woo a hero. (I seriously recommend studying Seishiro to anyone wishing to develop a Keeper non-player character in the roleplaying game, Changeling: The Lost). Subaru and Hokuto showed hints of the flaws that would doom them under their sweet and charming exteriors. These give just another sense of the epic to this once upon a time tale in Tokyo, grounded in every day wonders and sorrows familiar to a particular time and place. This is why Tokyo Babylon remains my favourite manga years later. This is why I still hunger for more.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Genevra Littlejohn.
65 reviews12 followers
February 29, 2008
I'm not usually a fan of Clamp, because they're histrionic and overdramatic--but this series, for all its drama, was handled with a deft touch. I particularly loved the character of Subaru, who is the sort of Good Person you very rarely see--easily willing to die for what he believed to be right, unafraid of pain or death to save you either, but if you're bad, God help you, because he'll dispatch you without a warning. Because that's how good guys work, when they're warriors; no need for last words, no space for posturing. A mad dog is a sad thing, but still needs to die, and so better to end it quickly.

His counter, Seishiro, is equally fascinating for his utter amorality, which is also something not often encountered in fiction. Never a cackling pantovillain, never even raising his voice, smiling quietly but sweetly--he buys groceries, makes dinner, cares for ailing puppies, with a sincere heart. You'd think he's a nice guy right up until the point where he opened your ribs with his bare hands and bled you out under a cherry tree.
Profile Image for Coke Fernández.
360 reviews6 followers
December 27, 2020
Una de las mejores obras de CLAMP. Se crece a cada tomo al mismo tiempo que se va volviendo más cruda y retorcida. Historias con crítica social, una narración muy fluida y un dibujo excelente. Tokyo Babylon es de esos títulos con los que cerrar la boca a los que siguen pensando que en el shojo manga todo son historias de amor de instituto. Muy recomendable. CLAMP es mucho más que Card Captor Sakura.
23 reviews
Read
December 4, 2011
Not everyone gets a happy ending and not all love is requited. Tokyo Babylon reminds us of the tragedy that occurs when we no longer remember how to express ourselves to others. A beautiful, fitting end to a series.
Profile Image for XA.
127 reviews1 follower
March 31, 2025
Me quedé 🤡
Como diría Paty Chapoy: "por qué terminó la relación entre ustedes? Aparentemente se amaban"
Profile Image for Jennifer.
28 reviews5 followers
September 27, 2011
Subaru is my favorite character in all of anime and manga. He develops so much from the beginning of Tokyo Babylon that by the time you see him again in X he's a different person because of (mild spoiler if you haven't read this volume) ...

You wouldn't guess that this is where CLAMP was going to end this series seeing as how lighthearted it started in the first place and that is why I like it so much.

Profile Image for Gise.Wen.
529 reviews30 followers
December 1, 2020
Bueno la verdad es que este ultimo tomo se revelan muchas intrigas y podemos ver la personalidad de todos. La pena de Subaru me rompe el corazón, los desenlaces son catastróficos pero la historia continua en X 1999 y podemos ver que pasa con el enfrentamiento de Subaru y Seishirou y quien ganara. Espero pronto volver a re leer ese manga y espero con ansias el nuevo anime que saldrá en Abril del 2021 . Alucinante me encanto desde principio a final.

Wen
Profile Image for David.
89 reviews4 followers
December 27, 2013
Although I found the pace a little out of sync with the other volumes, this was still an intelligent and thoughtful end to a tragic drama. I can only criticise it for not going deeper into the many ideas it brought up - sad things happened, but to see more of their emotion would have solidified this as a great and moving ending.
518 reviews13 followers
October 25, 2024
我其實是先看大然版的. 然後糾結到底要給2還是3, 倒也不是因為是悲劇, 應該說, 我記得我反而覺得是X有點害到對這結局的想法(本來就已經很不喜歡了, 看了X更討厭xDDDDD) 所以還是先不給太低.
Profile Image for Luana.
1,674 reviews59 followers
November 21, 2022
Fino ad oggi, avevo letto solo una serie delle CLAMP, ma ho intenzione di recuperare anche altre opere. "Tokyo Babylon" è solo l'inizio di questo progetto che porterò sicuramente avanti anche nel 2023, e devo dire che si è rivelato un recupero davvero molto apprezzato. "Tokyo Babylon" è un manga molto particolare, visto che le sue autrici non nascondono la vena dark e inquietante che si dipana volume dopo volume. E' una serie che non ha paura di trattare temi difficili.

Subaru Sumeragi è il nostro protagonista: ha 16 anni ed è il tredicesimo capofamiglia del clan Sumeragi, una famiglia che da secoli ha ricoperto il ruolo di protettore spirituale del Giappone. Il ragazzo, infatti, insieme alla nonna, è un onmyoji (uno dei pochi rimasti in circolazione), capace di gestire fenomeni di natura spirituale - di effetturare esorcismi, di aiutare gli spiriti dei defunti a raggiungere la pace. Nel corso dei sette volumi, gli arrivano richieste d'aiuto di vario tipo, che lo portano a confrontarsi direttamente con temi che non sempre trovano spazio in un'opera di questo tipo. E invece qui le CLAMP non si tirano indietro, visto che si parla espressamente di suicidio, di stupro, di bullismo, di violenza su minori e anziani, di mancanza di sensibilità nei confronti di persone disabili. Di dolore in tutte le sue molteplici forme, perché, come ci viene ripetuto spesso nel corso della serie, ogni persona è un piccolo mondo, vive certe sensazioni in maniera diversa dalle altre. Subaru è un ragazzo dal cuore puro, che non dà mai importanza a se stesso e ai suoi sentimenti, ma che rimane segnato nel profondo da ciascuno di questi incontri - incontri che lo fanno entrare in contatto con un mondo di sofferenza, di ingiustizie, che lo portano a vedere come la disperazione spinga le persone a compiere gesti estremi, come certe emozioni finiscano per durare anche dopo la morte. Anche se è convinto di non essere bravo a trattare con le persone, tutti si affezionano a lui e al suo animo buono, animali inclusi.
Al suo fianco c'è quel vulcano di energia di Hokuto, sua sorella gemella. Hokuto è una ragazza solare, spigliata, con dei gusti stravaganti in fatto di moda. Non ha i poteri spirituali del fratello, ma ha comunque una dote speciale: sa leggere nel cuore di Subaru. Lo comprende, conosce il suo carattere. Ecco perché vuole che trovi qualcosa o qualcuno capace di fargli battere il cuore, un sentimento in grado di spingerlo a desiderare qualcosa per se stesso (dopotutto, Subaru non si è mai considerato importante, non ha mai dato eccessivo peso e valore ai suoi sogni). Inoltre, dietro quella facciata da ragazza frivola, si nasconde un intuito niente male, visto che avrà sempre dei dubbi sul vero carattere dell'ultimo personaggio principale: Seichiro Sakurazuka.
Seichiro è un vero maestro di dissimulazione - peraltro, ha vita facile con uno come Subaru, un po' meno con Hokuto. Quando lo incontriamo la prima volta, vediamo un giovane veterinario, dal cuore gentile, dal sorriso tenero, che non ha alcuna paura ad ammettere i suoi sentimenti per il nostro Subaru. Eppure le CLAMP instillano subito nel lettore (così come in Hokuto) il seme del dubbio circa la vera natura di quest'uomo tutto cuore e gentilezza. Seichiro è la nemesi di Subaru: è il sakurazukamori, erede di una famiglia di onmyoji che usa le arti sciamaniche per uccidere la gente. Cosa che fa senza alcun particolare rimorso. Per lui non esiste alcuna differenza tra persone e oggetti. Niente a che vedere con l'animo empatico e puro di Subaru. Niente. I due si sono già incontrati in passato, quando Subaru era ancora un bambino e per puro caso aveva visto Seichiro all'opera. Chiunque veda un Sakurazukamori all'opera, non ha scampo, è destinato a morire. Tuttavia, in quel momento, Seichiro deciderà di fare una scommessa con il piccolo Subaru: nel caso in cui si fossero mai incontrati di nuovo, Seichiro avrebbe concesso al ragazzo un anno di tempo. Se in quell'arco di tempo Seichiro fosse stato in grado di affezionarsi sinceramente a Subaru, allora avrebbe risparmiato la vita al giovane. Peccato solo che il nostro assassino non sia un grando di provare il benché minimo sentimento, né odio né amore. Comunque sia, per non farselo sfuggire, Seichiro lascerà il suo marchio sulle mani del ragazzo (ecco perché Subaru porta sempre i guanti) in modo da riconoscerlo immediatamente. E quando questo succede, Seichiro mette in piedi la sua messa in scena, approfittandosi del buon cuore di Subaru (e del fatto che il ragazzo non ricorda quasi nulla del loro primo incontro, se non degli sprazzi mentre sta sognando) e di Hokuto.
La cosa che rende il finale veramente tragico è che, nel momento in cui Subaru fa luce sui suoi sentimenti, scopre la vera identità di quella persona, scopre che tutte quelle dichiarazioni d'amore e di affetto sono vuote. La tragedia è il sacrificio di Hokuto che decide di proteggere l'adorato fratello anche a costo della sua vita, consapevole di averlo spinto, nel tentativo di vederlo veramente felice, a provare un sentimento profondo per una persona che in realtà l'ha sempre voluto morto. La tragedia è che, dopo essere entrato in contatto con la sofferenza altrui, Subaru dovrà convivere per sempre anche con il suo dolore.

Insomma, "Tokyo Babylon" è un manga che non ci va tanto per il sottile, ma forse è proprio per questo che mi è piaciuto così tanto. Le cose vengono chiamate con il loro nome, e non ci sono troppi giri di parole. Il tratto dei disegni mi è piaciuto molto; ho adorato Subaru e Hokuto, Seichiro l'avrei corcato di mazzate e anche questo è un segno evidente della bravura delle CLAMP (comunque avevo anch'io dei dubbi su di lui fin dall'inizio ma perché tendo a non fidarmi delle persone così zuccherose e sempre sorridenti). Adesso non vedo l'ora di recuperare "X" per saperne di più sulla storia di Subaru, Hokuto e Seichiro.
Assolutamente consigliato, non solo agli amanti delle opere delle CLAMP (il recupero non è dei più semplici, e nemmeno dei più economici, ma, se potete, fatelo).
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Léa.
631 reviews
Read
March 5, 2025
Une fin très sombre, qui laisse un goût d'inachevé, mais émouvante.

Pour un avis plus global sur le manga : il aborde de nombreux thèmes très sombres ce qui surprend un peu. Les moments d'humour font du bien (même s'ils ne m'ont pas trop fait rire, ça allège un peu le rythme).
Des personnages sont explicitement gays (première fois dans Clamp !), même si leur relation finit mal. C'est une lecture intéressante, ma première vraie "bonne" découverte dans cet élan de lire tous les mangas de Clamp !
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for sylvya_from_asgard.
99 reviews1 follower
September 4, 2023
Le clamp sono veramente imprescindibili, un must se si vuole parlare anche solo lontanamente di manga.
Detto ciò, ho trovato in Tokyo Babylon picchi altissimi di passione narrativa per il tema nichilistico di fondo, apprezzando particolarmente l’efficacia anche nelle storie più brevi.
Non sono una grande fan del finale però, forse perché abituata a serie più prolifiche o narrazioni più esplicite.
Sento che tornerò a leggere questa serie anche più avanti nella mia vita.
Profile Image for Juane Pizarro.
182 reviews13 followers
July 11, 2023
Mejores 7 tomos de la vida, aguanten las clamp x crear las yaoi hands 😔✊
Profile Image for David.
490 reviews21 followers
March 29, 2017
I'm not a big manga person.

I don't have anything really against it. I enjoy comics afterall. But I can't see myself just reading any old thing. So, having watched X, I decided to check this out to learn a bit more about two of its most interesting characters.

I love this series. First, it contains many of the themes and concepts that some of their more interesting works do. Episodic explorations into spirtual/supernatural issues, that also have solid connetions to the problems that normal people have. (see xxxHolic and Legal Drug).

But it started here.
First, with this really strange almost silly hint at a homoerotic love story, actually a little unusual for the time it was published. Yet, as the reader gets more used to this idea (as does Subaru himself) things get darker and darker up until the very end.

It's a very sad and tragic story, but it is also a very powerful one. Subaru learned to love in a special way, and has both people he loves torn away from him. He is completely and utterly broken by this, but the story doesn't end there.

There a few hints, even early on in the story about the events of X/1999, in which the story of these characters reaches a resolution. I've not read it yet, but having re-read the series I'm tempted to go looking for it.

Anyhow, this entire story is one beautiful tragedy.
It's a story that sticks with you. Even as I knew how it would all turn out, I found myself at times hoping that maybe this time it would end differently. Maybe this time Subaru would get a happy ending.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Othy.
464 reviews5 followers
July 7, 2025
What an amazingly evil character CLAMP created. I feel as if the whole of the series is split in two, with the story of Seishirou and Subaru coming after a more episodic storytelling structure - but this manga is all about pairs and doubles. The evil side of Tokyo, which exists in both the natural and supernatural worlds, is then embodied by Seishirou, who wears a mask of kindness over that evil. The only thing that is bad is that Subaru's story is never finished in manga form, since X (where it continues) was never completed.
Profile Image for Yara.
29 reviews
January 20, 2025
The place where you live now... Is my sister there?
Dunno. What's she like?
She's just like me.
Then she's not here... There's no one up here with such lonely eyes as yours.


Eu comecei a ler este último volume durante a madrugada, e depois de terminá-lo, não consegui dormir pois todos os meus pensamentos ainda estavam em Tokyo Babylon, seus personagens, os casos que o Subaru resolvia, e também, nesse final que me deixou sem palavras.
Bem, acredito que a CLAMP fez um bom trabalho ao construir a atmosfera da história, que em certo momento, prometia algum evento ruim ao protagonista, apesar de não se saber qual seria esse (até este volume). Além disso, achei muito interessante como a finalização da obra se conecta com X/1999 (outra série de mangá da CLAMP), fiquei curiosa para conhecer mais do Subaru mais velho, após a tragédia em Tokyo Babylon.
Profile Image for Sem.
976 reviews42 followers
August 6, 2020
Even after all these years - I read the series first in scanlation - Tokyo Babylon still does it for me. It's not just deeply tragic or, at certain moments, apparently light-hearted; it deals with quite profound issues in a way that remains pertinent.

ETA 2020: Damn, it's still so hard. All the feels!
Profile Image for Samantha Richardson.
Author 12 books17 followers
May 5, 2022
I really love this story because it has such a different ending than you would expect given how it starts. The progression to its dark, tragic ending is gradual and sucks you in with its cuteness at the beginning and by the end, you're crying at how they've completely broken your heart. Subaru/Seishirou is one of my favourite tragic romances, even though it's such a messed up "love" story.
Profile Image for Victoria.
110 reviews2 followers
May 30, 2025
Whelp, that was horrific! The motive behind Seishirou’s bet barely makes sense, even after realizing that he’s literally a psychopath. However, the art and storytelling were beautiful. I really need to hunt down the rest of X/1999 and finish reading it.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Rowan McBride.
Author 13 books262 followers
October 7, 2012
Simultaneously one of the most beautiful and tragic coming-of-age stories I've ever read.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Lilyth.
382 reviews19 followers
April 13, 2015
Una vera delusione!
Sei numeri per preparare il finale che poi nemmeno c'è, tutto si svolge troppo in fretta, a me sembra che le Clamp non sapessero come uscirne e hanno lasciato tutto in sospeso.
Profile Image for Marc.
1,550 reviews30 followers
February 4, 2018
Pour une série éditée entre 1990 et 1993 (au Japon), elle aborde des sujets qui semblent encore d'actualité 30 ans plus tard...
Displaying 1 - 30 of 87 reviews

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