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Yusuke Urameshi, 14 ans est un adolescent rebelle, allergique à l’autorité. En voulant sauver un enfant, il est victime d’un accident de la circulation qui lui coûte la vie ! Comme sa mort n'a pas été prévue par le roi Emma, celui-ci décide de lui donner une chance de revenir à la vie en le mettant à l'épreuve. Il accompagne Botan, la Guide des Voies Célestes. À eux deux, ils viennent en aide aux fantômes égarés ou à des âmes en perdition. Le Royaume a décidé de ressusciter Yusuke et de le faire revenir sur Terre. En contrepartie, Yusuke se voit confier un nouveau rôle, celui de détective /chasseur de fantômes pour le compte du Royaume. Redécouvrez cette série culte avant Hunter X hunter, de l'action en perspective !!

314 pages, Paperback

First published November 18, 2010

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About the author

Yoshihiro Togashi

323 books1,335 followers
Yoshihiro Togashi (冨樫義博) is a manga artist. Credited in Chinese translations as Fu Jian Yi Bo.

He began drawing manga at an early age; while he attended college, the publisher Shueisha recognized his talent. Togashi has authored numerous manga series in different genres during the past three decades. He is perhaps best known for writing and illustrating the YuYu Hakusho and Hunter × Hunter series, both of which have been published in the popular Weekly Shōnen Jump magazine. Togashi is married to Naoko Takeuchi, the author of Sailor Moon.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for hua.
318 reviews6 followers
November 2, 2022
J'ai honnêtement pas réussi à finir de lire le tome en entier tellement j'ai trouvé ça archi nul désolée mais les vieux shonens misogynes c'est absolument pas pour moi je souffle grave on s'ennuie trop
Profile Image for Sunny.
4 reviews
March 19, 2022
J'ai adoré la thématique de l'au delà.
Profile Image for Jay.
218 reviews3 followers
February 9, 2026
★★★★★ — 4.9/5


Yu Yu Hakusho (besides maybe FMA*4.999) is a perfect series!
It will and has always stood out to me as more than just a manga series—it felt like a lifeline, a mirror, and a memory all wrapped in one. It’s one of those rare stories that blends action, heart, and character growth in such a sincere way that it doesn't just entertain—it reaches into your life and finds a home. My first encounter with it came through the Shonen Jump monthly magazine when it finally landed in America. Those mail days were like small holidays. I’d rip open the plastic wrap, skip past whatever else was inside, and go straight to the chapter that followed Yusuke Urameshi and his oddball crew. Out of all the worlds Shonen Jump introduced me to, it was theirs that felt closest to mine—chaotic, messy, loyal, and real.

At the heart of it all is Yusuke. He wasn’t polished. He didn’t have a destiny etched in stone or some pure-hearted dream to save the world. He was a kid left to figure life out on his own—raw, angry, and tired of being written off. That alone hit close to home. I wasn’t much different when I was younger. Raised by a single parent who didn’t show much love or direction, I found myself growing up more in the streets than at home. I skipped school, got into fights, brushed up against death more than once—not in some dramatic sense, but in the quiet, dangerous way kids in those environments do. Yusuke’s struggle to find purpose, to understand what he was worth even when the world didn’t seem to care, made me feel like maybe someone out there got it. That maybe I wasn’t as alone as I felt.

Togashi’s decision to make a so-called “delinquent” the hero wasn’t just clever—it was personal. Yusuke wasn’t a saint, but he had a fierce loyalty, a moral core that ran deep even when he couldn’t explain it. That rang so true to the way my own world worked growing up. The people I called friends weren’t always clean-cut or easy to understand, but the bonds we formed were real. We earned each other through shared scars, shared moments, and an unspoken promise to look out for one another.

The supporting characters only deepened that connection. Genkai, especially, felt like someone straight out of my life. She’s tough, blunt, and doesn’t hand out praise lightly—but behind that sharpness is someone who truly cares. She reminded me so much of my great-grandparents—elder figures who had seen so much more than they ever said, who challenged me with hard truths and expected me to rise, even when I didn’t believe I could. Genkai didn’t coddle Yusuke; she gave him something far more valuable—honest guidance and belief wrapped in tough love. Their bond is one of the most heartfelt relationships I’ve ever seen in any story.

The arcs of Yu Yu Hakusho—from spirit world mysteries to dark tournaments and moral reckonings—never felt like simple plot points. They were milestones in Yusuke’s growth. Each fight wasn’t just about power levels or flashy moves; it was about identity, loyalty, and choice. Sensui’s arc, especially, dug deep into the layers of good and evil, and how thin that line can become when people are broken by the world. That entire confrontation felt like something out of a conversation I would’ve had with the older kids in my neighborhood, wrestling with the big questions long before we had the tools to really answer them.

And then there’s the rest of the crew. Kuwabara, the big-hearted goofball with a code of honor you could set your watch to. I knew kids like him—hell, maybe I was him on some days. Hiei, always on guard, carrying his trauma like armor, but still showing up when it mattered. And Kurama, so composed and graceful, yet capable of terrifying strength when pushed. Each of them felt like pieces of the people I knew—or wanted to be.

Reading Yu Yu Hakusho during middle school was like finding a secret map to emotions I didn’t know how to name yet. It didn’t just entertain me—it helped me process the things I was going through. The danger, the grief, the loneliness, the need for someone to believe in me. This series had it all, not because it was trying to be profound, but because it was honest. Honest about pain, about growth, about how hard it is to hold onto yourself in a world that keeps trying to define you.

Even though my graphic novel collection was lost—an unfortunate fallout with my parent I’d rather not revisit—the stories stayed with me. They didn’t leave just because the books did. That’s the kind of impact Yu Yu Hakusho had. And still has.

I don’t collect like I used to. Maybe it’s age, or maybe it’s because once something sets the standard so high, it’s hard for anything new to match that feeling. But I still carry Yu Yu Hakusho with me. In my values, in my memories, and in the way I view storytelling. It wasn’t just a favorite series. It was a reminder that even the roughest starts can shape something meaningful—and that sometimes, it takes a street kid with a broken home and a stubborn heart to show us the true measure of strength.
Profile Image for Artemissia G.
1,669 reviews35 followers
February 13, 2022
https://songedunenuitdete.com/2022/02...
Quel grand et beau moment j’ai passé avec ce premier tome ! Bon, le début m’a fait pleurer comme une madeleine pour des raisons qui me sont propres, mais quand même, les obsèques de Yusuke m’ont touchée alors qu’à la base, c’est juste l’excuse à ce qui va suivre : des tas d’aventures pour notre héros.

Ce premier volume est une suite d’histoires courtes qui posent les bases qui serviront à mieux comprendre notre héros et son entourage (son ennemi, sa copine d’enfance, etc.).

Sous des dehors de racaille notoire, à travers des chapitres indépendants, on découvre un personnage incroyablement humain, prêt à aider son prochain et un peu naïf sur les bords. C’est d’ailleurs ce qui le rend super attachant à mes yeux. Rien à voir avec ce gamin bagarreur et frondeur qu’il a toujours montré du temps où il était vivant.

On fait donc aussi la rencontre de Botan, la déesse de la mort, mais aussi du seigneur des enfers, Enma Jr. J’adore ce moment où Yusuke le découvre pour la première fois.

Il y a beaucoup d’humour et d’actions dans ce premier tome. Ça parle aussi beaucoup. Oui, à l’époque, même les mangas avaient son lot de blablas.

Pour ce qui est du dessin, même si Yoshihiro Togashi n’était pas encore à son apogée, j’apprécie déjà beaucoup son style. Ça me rappelle aussi celui des mangakas d’alors comme Katsura (Wingman et video girl) avec les coiffures d’époque. Concernant la mise en pages, c’est parfois un peu brouillon à mon goût, mais ça passe tout de même. Vraiment, relire ce premier tome, ça m’a rendu très nostalgique.

Quoi qu’il en soit, Yuyu Hakusho est une valeur sûre qui saura plaire aux anciens comme aux nouveaux lecteurs de mangas même si le style a vieilli.
Profile Image for Joe.
54 reviews
October 20, 2024
Mir gefällt Togashis Nachwort, in dem er sagt, dass er damals ein anderer Mensch gewesen sei und sein jetziges Ich deshalb nichts über die Geschichte erzählen könne. Das merkt man, wenn man es mit seinen neuen Kapiteln zu "Hunter x Hunter" vergleicht. "Yu Yu Hakusho" ist ein klassischer Shounen, der so einige genretypische Stereotype bedient. Nichtsdestotrotz ist es eine sehr humorvolle und originelle Geschichte mit unglaublich tollen Charakteren.
Profile Image for Jo'.
145 reviews4 followers
February 24, 2022
3,5. C'était très sympa, je suis super contente de découvrir une autre série de l'auteur!
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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