Chinatsu no Uta
Chinatsu's Voice
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Chinatsu no Uta

Alternative Titles

Japanese: 千夏のうた
English: Chinatsu's Voice
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Information

Type: Manga
Volumes: 3
Chapters: 31
Status: Finished
Published: Feb 5, 2004 to Sep 30, 2004
Genres: Drama Drama, Slice of Life Slice of Life
Demographic: Seinen Seinen
Serialization: Young Jump
Authors: Kitagawa, Shou (Story & Art)

Statistics

Score: 7.011 (scored by 398398 users)
1 indicates a weighted score.
Ranked: #87442
2 based on the top manga page. Please note that 'R18+' titles are excluded.
Popularity: #13127
Members: 1,201
Favorites: 2

Recommendations

Dapple and Chinatsu give off a different vibe from everything else. Not only do they deal with nature (rural setting in Chinatsu; tree-talking in Dapple), the slice-of-life antics of the two get propelled onwards by prepubescent romance subplots--boy x supernatual, attention-grabbing girl lead duo pairings. What's more, both series ended inconclusively with their third volumes. How similar can you get!? In Dapple the heroine is an unaging girl with the appearance of a pre-teen and the ability to communicate with plants. In Chinatsu the heroine can sing and give life by doing so. It's such a shame neither was ever completed because both were an absolute  read more 
reportRecommended by AironicallyHuman
Yotsuba follows the daily randomness and amazement with everything of its titular heroine. She's got a screw or two lose/is mentally disabled and likes smiling as she gets involved with the family next-door, after moving to a new town. It's purely slice-of-life and - in the first five volumes, at least - has no real direction. Chinatsu, like Yotsuba, follows the life of its titular heroine after she moves to a new town. Unlike Yotsuba, Chinatsu comes across like a person, despite of her friendliness and cheerful, smiling nature, and it's easy to understand why everyone come to love her. There's a touch of romance and  read more 
reportRecommended by AironicallyHuman