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The series won the award for Best Shōjo Manga at the 39th Kodansha Manga Awards. [28] The television drama was very popular and also raised discussion on traditional views and values on marriage in Japan. [29] [30] The ending theme Koi by Gen Hoshino featuring the cast dancing the Koi Dance ("love dance") became a craze in Japan. [31]
The series follows Uryū Kamihate, a high school student who is aiming to pass the entrance exams to the Kyoto University's medical school. After living in an orphanage for much of his life following the death of his mother, he comes to live at Amagami Shrine, where the head priest asks him to marry one of his three granddaughters.
Shinshi's young son Hideo visits, revealing Shinshi's wife asked for a divorce. The usually quiet co-worker George sends Ohara with Hideo to look for Shinshi. Ohara realises with his limited understanding of marriage he cannot even begin to understand divorce, or help Hideo. Eventually all of JTC find Shinshi drunk, but he runs away.
Natsume Arata no Kekkon (夏目アラタの結婚, lit. ' Arata Natsume's Marriage ') is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Tarō Nogizaka. It was serialized in Shogakukan's seinen manga magazine Big Comic Superior from June 2019 to January 2024, with its chapters collected in twelve tankōbon volumes.
Jingai-san no Yome (人外さんの嫁, lit."Non-Human Creature's Wife") is a Japanese four-panel manga series written by Yu Aikawa and illustrated by Akiwo Yasaka, serialized online via Ichijinsha's Zero-Sum Online website since June 2016.
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1122: For a Happy Marriage, simply known in Japan as 1122, is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Peko Watanabe . It was serialized in Kodansha 's seinen manga magazine Monthly Morning Two [ ja ] from September 2016 to May 2020, with its chapters collected in seven tankōbon volumes.