Finished Manga
Fukushima Devil Fish

“Katsumata Susumu's 1980s manga warned of nuclear dangers; collection features folklore, lonely youth, and post-Fukushima essays.”

Fukushima Devil Fish

30,287 rank · 346 readers · 1 favorites
Seinen Drama Slice of Life
9 chapters · 1 volumes · 2011 - Present · Manga
For you

Add Fukushima Devil Fish to your library

Add to library
Chapters · 9 0/9
CH 01 CH 09

Would You Love or Hate This?

AI-powered analysis tailored to your taste

Based on your preference for character-driven stories with layered emotional arcs, this title's exploration of identity and belonging would deeply resonate. The pacing mirrors series you've rated highly, and its thematic depth aligns with your appreciation for nuanced storytelling...

However, the slow initial episodes might test your patience given your history of dropping shows that don't hook you early. The art style shift in the middle arc could also be a concern...

Sign up to unlock
Personalized to you
Honest pros & cons
Based on your library
Get Your Personal Analysis

Synopsis

Katsumata Susumu's 1980s manga warned of nuclear dangers; collection features folklore, lonely youth, and post-Fukushima essays.

More than twenty years before the meltdowns at the Fukushima Daiichi reactors in 2011, Katsumata Susumu was using his cartooning skills to alert Japanese to the dangers of nuclear power. Inspired by Katsumata's research trips to the now notorious facility and his background in physics, Fukushima Devil Fish begins with two stories from the 1980s on the subject of “nuclear gypsies,” the men who labor under oppressive conditions to maintain Japan’s fleet of nuclear power plants. The book then cycles back to the late 1960s and 1970s with a group of stories, originally published in the legendary alt-manga magazines Garo and COM, populated with creatures from Japanese folklore and lonely young men bereft of home and family. At turns haunting and endearing, Fukushima Devil Fish reveals Katsumata as both a master of comics as a poetic form and a true friend to the victims of Japan’s modernization. The collection is rounded out with a suite of essays by the artist, historian Asakawa Mitsuhiro, and critic Abe Yukihiro, which illuminate Katsumata’s life and career and the importance of his work in a post-Fukushima world. (Source: Breakdown Press)

What people say

Read Order & Related

Explore the Fukushima Devil Fish universe

If you stay for this, you'll stay for these

See all →

The community pairs this with

See all →

Publication slate

A Manga Publication

  • Format 9 × 1 ch × vol
  • Total read 1h 12m approx
  • Published Oct 2011 – ongoing
  • Source Manga media type
  • Ref. BS-M26369 catalog

In the news

See all →