Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

My Happy Marriage

Japanese light novel series and its franchise From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

My Happy Marriage
Remove ads

My Happy Marriage (Japanese: わたしの幸せな結婚, Hepburn: Watashi no Shiawase na Kekkon) is a Japanese light novel series written by Akumi Agitogi [ja] and illustrated by Tsukiho Tsukioka. Initially published online via the user-generated novel publishing website Shōsetsuka ni Narō, it was later acquired by Fujimi Shobo, who has released the series since January 2019 under their Fujimi L Bunko imprint.

Quick Facts わたしの幸せな結婚 (Watashi no Shiawase na Kekkon), Genre ...

A manga adaptation illustrated by Rito Kohsaka [ja] has been serialized in Square Enix's Gangan Online service since December 2018. A live-action film adaptation premiered in Japan in March 2023. An anime television series produced by Kinema Citrus aired from July to September 2023. A second season aired from January to April 2025. A new anime project has been announced.

Remove ads

Synopsis

In an alternative version of the Taishō era in which spirits and magic are real, but in decline, Miyo Saimori, born without supernatural talent, is forced into an existence of servitude by her abusive stepmother. When Miyo finally comes of marriageable age, though, her hopes of being whisked away to a better life crumble after she discovers her fiancé's identity: Kiyoka Kudou, a commander apparently so cold and cruel that his previous would-be brides all fled within three days of their engagements. With no home to return to, Miyo resigns herself to her fate—and soon finds that her pale and handsome husband-to-be is anything but the monster she expected. As they slowly open their hearts to each other, both realize the other may be their chance at finding true love and happiness.

Remove ads

Media

Summarize
Perspective

Light novels

Written by Akumi Agitogi [ja], My Happy Marriage began publication online via the user-generated novel publishing website Shōsetsuka ni Narō.[6] The series was later acquired by Fujimi Shobo, who began publishing the novels with illustrations by Tsukiho Tsukioka on January 15, 2019, under their Fujimi L Bunko imprint.[7] As of March 2025, nine volumes have been released.[8] To advertise the fourth volume of the novel, three promotional videos were released on September 15, 2020, featuring the voices of Kaito Ishikawa, Reina Ueda, and Yuki Yagi as Kiyoka, Miyo and Kaya, respectively.[9] In June 2021, Yen Press announced that it licensed the novels for English publication.[10]

Volumes

More information No., Original release date ...

Manga

A manga adaptation illustrated by Rito Kohsaka [ja] began serialization online via Square Enix's Gangan Online service on December 20, 2018.[6] As of July 2024, five tankōbon volumes have been released.[26] In July 2021, Square Enix Manga & Books licensed the manga for an English print and digital release.[27] Square Enix published an art book on August 10, 2023.[28]

Volumes

More information No., Original release date ...

Live-action film

A live-action film adaptation was announced on April 25, 2022.[38] It is directed by Ayuko Tsukahara, with the screenplay written by Tomoe Kanno [ja], and music composed by Akiyuki Tateyama [ja].[39] The film was released in Japan on March 17, 2023 by Toho.[40][3] Idol group Snow Man performed the theme song titled "Tapestry" (タペストリー).[41]

The film had its North American premiere at the Toronto Japanese Film Festival on June 10, 2023, under the title As Long as We Both Shall Live.[42] It was also screened at the Fantasia International Film Festival on August 8 the same year.[43][44]

Anime

An anime adaptation was announced on April 5, 2022. It was later revealed to be a television series produced by Kinema Citrus and directed by Takehiro Kubota, with supervision and storyboards handled by Takao Abo, scripts written by Ami Satō, Takahito Ōnishi and Momoka Toyoda, character designs by Shōko Yasuda [ja], and music composed by Evan Call.[45] The series aired in Japan from July 5 to September 20, 2023, on Tokyo MX and other networks,[4][46] with Netflix simulcasting the series globally,[47] while Bilibili simulcasted it in mainland China.[48] The opening theme song is "Anata no Soba ni" (貴方の側に。; lit.'By Your Side') by Riria [ja], while the ending theme song is "Vita Philosophica" (ヰタ・フィロソフィカ) by Kashitarō Itō [ja].[49] The thirteenth episode was bundled as an original video animation (OVA) with the special edition of the eighth light novel volume, which was released on March 15, 2024.[50][51] The OVA premiered on Netflix on November 22 of the same year.[52][53]

A second season was announced after the airing of the twelfth episode.[54][55] Masayuki Kojima co-directed the season with Takehiro Kubota, while Ami Satō was the sole head writer and also co-wrote the script with Minori Hashiba, Fūka Ishii, and Momoka Toyoda.[5] The season aired from January 6 to April 9, 2025.[56] The opening theme song is "Shiawase no Yakusoku" (幸せな約束。; lit.'A Happy Promise') by Riria, while the ending theme song is "Tsukikage Okuri" (月影おくり; lit.'Moonlight Sending') by Kashitarō Itō.[57][58]

A new anime project was announced after the airing of the second-season finale.[59]

Stage play

A stage play adaptation titled Watashi no Shiawase na Kekkon: Teito Rikugun Okutsuki Kitan was announced on June 9, 2023. It featured an original story, with Kaori Miura serving as the director and writer, and Taka composing the music. Akumi Agitogi, the original author, also cooperated in the production. The stage play ran at Theater 1010 in Tokyo from August 11–20, 2023.[60]

Remove ads

Reception

Summarize
Perspective

Accolades and box office

In 2020, the manga adaptation ranked eighth in the sixth Next Manga Awards in the web manga category.[61] It ranked sixth in the 2021 edition of Takarajimasha's Kono Manga ga Sugoi! list of the best manga for female readers.[62] The manga ranked first in the "Nationwide Bookstore Employees' Recommended Comics of 2021" list by Japanese bookstore Honya Club.[63] In 2022, the manga was nominated for the best shōjo manga at the 46th Kodansha Manga Award.[64] It ranked 29th on the 2022 "Book of the Year" list by Da Vinci magazine.[65]

The live-action film debuted at first at the Japanese box office during its opening weekend, earning ¥654 million through 479,700 admissions.[66] By December 2023, it earned ¥2.8 billion in Japan.[67] At the 66th Blue Ribbon Awards, it was nominated for Best Film, and Ren Meguro was nominated for Best Newcomer.[68]

Awards and nominations

More information Year, Award ...
Remove ads

See also

  • Book Girl, a light novel series whose first manga adaptation was illustrated by Rito Kohsaka

Notes

  1. Credited for both Series Composition (シリーズ構成) and Screenplay (脚本) for the first season,[4] and only the latter for the second season[5]

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads