Quoted By:
/a/, we're here today because we built ourselves up on decades and decades of anime and manga. How well versed you are in all that history varies from each individual anon, but it's something to acknowledge every once in a while.
Today we're going to be dumping the first volume of Kaze to Ki no Uta.
Kaze to Ki was released in 1976 after almost a decade of creator Keiko Takemiya's struggling to get it published and ran for seventeen volumes. It follows the lives of goodguy Serge Battour and insufferable little shit Gilbert Cocteau and touches on topics such as incest, pedophilia, drug addiction.
If nothing else, you can get a laugh out of how very 70s the whole thing is, from the flowery art style to the melodramatic storytelling.
So without further ado, let's begin.
Today we're going to be dumping the first volume of Kaze to Ki no Uta.
Kaze to Ki was released in 1976 after almost a decade of creator Keiko Takemiya's struggling to get it published and ran for seventeen volumes. It follows the lives of goodguy Serge Battour and insufferable little shit Gilbert Cocteau and touches on topics such as incest, pedophilia, drug addiction.
If nothing else, you can get a laugh out of how very 70s the whole thing is, from the flowery art style to the melodramatic storytelling.
So without further ado, let's begin.