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St. Dragon Girl

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7.4/10
MyAnimeList

Published by
  
Shueisha

Demographic
  
Shōjo

Author
  
Natsumi Matsumoto

Illustrator
  
Natsumi Matsumoto

4.3/5
Goodreads

Written by
  
Natsumi Matsumoto

English publisher
  
Viz Media

Magazine
  
Ribon

Copyright date
  
1999

Publishers
  
Viz Media, Shueisha

St. Dragon Girl t3gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcS0umtuyfNQ9lWRFR

Original run
  
October 1999 – April 2003

Genres
  
Romantic comedy, Magical girl, Martial arts, Fantasy Fiction

Similar
  
The Gentlemen's Alliance, Cactus's Secret, Alice 19th, Hot Gimmick, Tail of the Moon

St. ♥ Dragon Girl (聖[セイント] ♡ ドラゴンガール, Kiyoshi Seinto Doragon Gaaru) is a Japanese manga by Natsumi Matsumoto, who also created Yumeiro Patissiere. It was serialized in Ribon from October 1999 through April 2003. The individual chapters were collected and published in eight volumes by Shueisha. The series focuses on childhood friends Momoka and Ryuga, after Momoka is possessed by a dragon while protecting Ryuga. It is followed by a sequel series titled St. ♥ Dragon Girl Miracle (聖[セイント] ♡ ドラゴンガール みらくる, Kiyoshi [Seinto] Doragon Gaaru Mirakuru) which focuses on Momoko and Ryuga's daughter, Anjuu Sendou.

Contents

The series is licensed for English language release in North America by Viz Media, who released the first volume on December 2, 2008. As of December 2009, five of the eight volumes have been published.

Release

While both of the series were published by Shueisha in Japan and Tokyopop in Germany, St. Dragon Girl was also published in North America by Viz Media.

Reception

Leroy Douresseaux of the Comic Book Bin claims that the use of magic in the series "energizes what could have been standard fare". He also claims that the mixture of "typically super-pretty shojo manga art with demon-fighting" is a "fun read". He also likens the series to a root beer float, "At some point, you might be too old to have such a really sweet treat in an extra-large size, but it is still sooooo good". Several times, he said that although the series was intended for younger girls, it would also appeal older readers. Deb Aoki of About.com considered this as a perfect series for tweens with "charming art, simple stories and chaste romance." Ed Sizemore of Manga Worth Reading felt that Matsumoto managed to create a cast of wholesome people that aren't boring", but was frustrated by the main characters' refusal to admit their mutual attraction to each another. Anime News Network's Carlo Santos disliked the first volume, considering it episodic and formulaic nature, similar to other high school romances, and having ordinary art work.

References

St. Dragon Girl Wikipedia