15 Wonderful Slice of Life Manga
Whatever your personal flavor when it comes to slice-of-life manga, you’ll find something to sink your teeth into here. Read about wholesome manga here.
Slice-of-life manga come in a variety of shapes and sizes. Some are romantic, while others are comedic. Some people twist simple situations into bizarre shapes. Others are coming-of-age stories about queer people.
Important Slice of Life Manga
Whatever your personal preference is for the slice-of-life manga, you’ll find something to enjoy here. Many of this manga, whether comedy, romance, or something entirely different, will almost certainly lead you down a rabbit hole as you discover your own favorite slice-of-life manga.
Enjoy what you find here and elsewhere! You will undoubtedly laugh and cry, sometimes simultaneously.
Kaguya-sama: Love is War (Kaguya-sama wa Kokurasetai) by Aka Akasaka
Translated by Emi Louie-Nishikawa
Kaguya-sama spans the comedy, romance, and slice-of-life manga genres with ease.
It’s primarily a comedy about two young geniuses locked in a battle of wits as they each try to avoid admitting their feelings to the other while also attempting to trick the other into admitting their own feelings. As the subtitle suggests, love is war.
The romance, however, peeks through the clouds of comedy as Kaguya-sama escalates. We are witnessing an increase in genuine adoration. We see Kaguya and her rival Shirogane blush and act sheepish as they approach letting down their guards and being genuine.
This slice-of-life manga is at times laugh-out-loud funny, but it keeps you going with moments of honesty and earnestness. Its situations are relatable, even if our protagonists are not, despite being elite-level smart and, in Kaguya’s case, wealthy.
There is also an anime adaptation of Kaguya-sama: Love is War, which features excellent voice acting, gorgeous animation, and a fantastic opening theme.
The manga, on the other hand, makes better use of the narrator’s voice, and Aka Akasaka’s depiction of his characters’ facial expressions is superior to the original, making for one of the best comedy and slice-of-life manga available.
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Komi Can’t Communicate by Tomohito Oda
Translated by John Werry
Komi Can’t Communicate (Komi-san wa Komyushou Desu) by Tomohito Oda is a comedy slice-of-life manga propelled forward by a sweet premise that remains interesting throughout, but with some comedic moments that only occasionally land.
The title Komi is a popular high school girl almost by default. She is immaculate, beautiful, and refined; she never speaks to anyone, and her piercing gaze reduces anyone who looks her way to a puddle.
Komi’s presentation (not by choice, as we soon discover) leaves her beautiful and unapproachable, giving her a goddess-like aura; anyone who strays from her path is unworthy of her attention.
Komi attends Itan Private High School, where Hitohito Tadano has recently enrolled with the personal goal of being ordinary and simply fitting in. Tadano, like everyone else, is struck by Komi’s beauty and rendered speechless by the looks she gives him.
Tadano, on the other hand, quickly realizes that Komi’s terrifying veneer of coldness is all a misunderstanding, one that she can’t correct because, as the title implies, Komi can’t communicate.
This slice-of-life manga has an excellent setup and story. It introduces us to a charming pair of characters: a girl and a boy with no romantic chemistry who embark on a quest together.
It also provides us with a very relatable theme to which younger readers can latch on. Communication problems, loneliness, and misunderstanding are all common stresses for teenagers, and many will undoubtedly find a friend in Komi.
Nichijou by Keiichi Arawi
Translated by Jennifer McKeon
Nichijou is a slice-of-life manga masterpiece that plays with the concept of “slice-of-life” in a very meta, constantly hilarious way.
Nichijou (Everyday), set in the town of Tokisadame, revolves around two main groups of characters: a group of three young schoolgirls and an odd trio comprised of a child professor, her hand-built robot, and a talking cat.
Despite the fact that the strangeness of the second trio can be seen from a mile away, the three schoolgirls in this slice-of-life manga are just as odd. The first is deadpan and serious, the second is overjoyed, and the third is wildly emotional.
Each chapter of Nichijou begins with a fairly mundane scenario one that is relatable or, at the very least, understandable and reasonable but that scenario quickly morphs and devolves into absurdity. Almost without fail, the events of each chapter will twist your stomach.
Nichijou’s comedy is truly outstanding. These comedy scenes are shocking, and unexpected, and blend slapstick with absurdism. They are loud and unabashed one moment and quiet and subtle the next.
Nichijou is all about taking everyday occurrences, struggles, and battles (that we all deal with politely and with camouflaged frustration) and tackling them with bombast and hilarity. Nichijou is a wonderful cathartic slice-of-life manga in this way.
Way of the Househusband (Gokushufudou) by Kousuke Oono
Translated by Sheldon Drzka and Amanda Haley
While Gokushufudo has been adapted into a live-action film and a Netflix animated series, it’s Kousuke Oono’s original manga that will have you gripping your hips with laughter time and again.
Gokushufudo: Way of the Househusband is a slice-of-life manga with a simple premise: a once fearsome and terrifying yakuza boss has become a househusband.
Tatsu is the name of our former yakuza boss. Tatsu, formerly known as The Immortal Dragon, is now a devoted househusband eager to support his career-woman wife Miku.
Gokushufudo, like Kaguya-sama and Nichijou, is an episodic comedy slice-of-life manga. The brilliant and absurd juxtapositions created by Tatsu’s situation: a crime boss living the simple and soft life of a househusband, are the source of the comedy here.
The ways in which Oono keeps this manga’s comedy fresh, despite its simple premise, are remarkable and always unexpected. That he does is consistent evidence of the comedy genius at work here.
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A Girl on the Shore by Inio Asano
Translated by Jocelyne Allen
Inio Asano is a mangaka who is well-known for being one of the manga world’s most astute and daring creators. His series Goodnight Punpun is a much-lauded masterpiece that explores the tragedy of growing up lost and afraid.
But, for a self-contained example of Inio Asano’s genius and of harrowing slice-of-life manga, I recommend the raw, erotic, desperately sad A Girl on the Shore (Umibe no Onnanoko).
A Girl on the Shore follows the rocky, immature, sexually charged relationship of two Japanese middle-schoolers living in a depressing, unappealing nowhere town.
Our protagonists of this slice-of-life manga are Koume and Isobe, neither yet sixteen years of age but both already chewing their nails in sexual anticipation. Koume has briefly involved herself with the local cool guy, who quickly used her for fun and games.
Meanwhile, Isobe is explicitly written as a lonely, isolated, awkward otaku loser; an incel in the making. Though also far from it given the nature of his and Koume’s relationship.
Every other character exists as a thing against which our protagonists can react, which they often do. They antagonize, threaten, manipulate, and even brawl with our protagonists.
Their story begins with Isobe having admitted his feelings for Koume, and her brushing him off while still being comfortable enough to sleep with him.
In the beginning, their relationship is defined by their sex, which is depicted with graphic intensity through Asano’s art. Which makes this a good point to mention that, despite our characters being teenagers, this slice-of-life manga is not suitable for young readers.
Young readers of YA fiction should look elsewhere. A Girl on the Shore is brutal and graphic. That goes for its characters’ thoughts and actions, as well as its depictions of sexual encounters.
Horimiya by Daisuke Hagiwara
Translated by Taylor Engel
Horimiya (full title: Hori-san to Miyamura-kun) is a romance slice-of-life manga series that was originally both written and drawn by mangaka Hiroki Adachi (using the pen name Hero).
The manga became known as Horimiya when it was adapted by artist Daisuke Hagiwara (kind of a One Punch Man situation). As this version of the Horimiya manga wrapped up, the anime adaptation began airing and gaining a whole new fanbase.
Horimiya is a refreshing teen romance story that centers on the titular Kyoko Hori and Izumi Miyamura, two high school classmates who quickly fall in love.
Hori-san is a popular honor student with hidden home life: she raises her little brother and manages the home because her parents are “busy”. Miyamura-kun plays the introverted and lonely otaku at school but is, in actual fact, a sexy, tattooed, and pierced himbo.
The story moves at an impressive click, with the surface-level readings of these characters thrown in our faces in chapter one, before being immediately stripped away, revealing the more complex lives and personalities of these two love interests.
Until the story’s beginning, Hori and Miyamura have never spoken. He keeps a low profile by design and her heavy responsibilities keep her from noticing other people. It’s their secrets, which are quickly exposed to the other, which form a bond between them.
Miyamura begins to spend every evening after school at Hori’s home. He brings cake from his family’s bakery and he helps her raise her adorable little brother. The two confide in one another, letting their guards down and letting the other one see their true colors.
Yotsuba to! by Kiyohiko Azuma
Stylized as Yotsuba&! in its English translation, Yotsuba to! is a charming and upbeat slice-of-life manga that follows the everyday living of a young girl, the titular Yotsuba.
While there is a supporting cast of characters, the focus of this slice-of-life manga is on Yotsuba herself, and the chapters are very much unchronological. You can dip in and out of what will become your favorite chapters, enjoy a few happy stories, and then move on.
Yotsuba herself is only five years old, but it’s her personality that is the heart and soul of this slice-of-life manga. Yotsuba is confident, expressive, and hilarious. The manga is chock full of hilarious moments, most of which are heavily visual and slapstick in nature.
Reminiscent of Kiki in the Kiki’s Delivery Service series of Japanese children’s books, Yotsuba is often getting up to cheeky antics, yanking members of her supporting cast along for the ride, and it is always unfailingly frantic and funny.
Nana by Ai Yazawa
Translated by Koji Goto and Allison Wolfe
Nana Komatsu was born in a small town which she describes as being neither a small village nor a bustling city. She is a middle child, neither rich nor poor. Entirely ordinary. And her older boyfriend is leaving her for Tokyo.
Nana Oosaki doesn’t remember her parents. She was raised by a sarcastic grandmother who worked hard, and now she is the frontwoman of a punk band called BLAST. And her bassist boyfriend is leaving her for Tokyo.
These two Nanas, when they each reach the age of 20, decide to move to Tokyo, one pursuing big dreams of a name in lights, the other looking for love. They meet on a train and, against all odds, become friends first, then roommates.
Nana is a dynamic and sweet slice-of-life manga, and a masterwork of the shoujo manga space. Essential reading for any fan of shoujo or slice-of-life manga.
Beastars by Paru Itagaki
Translated by Tomoko Kimura and Annette Roman
Beastars is set in a fictionalized world populated by anthropomorphized animals. Their genus, size, and diet are all used to develop the world-building of the manga, and also as allegories for real-world social divides between race, class, gender, sexuality, and so on.
The story of this slice-of-life manga begins at Cherryton Academy, a boarding school attended by a mix of herbivores and carnivores. Beastars has a large and diverse cast of characters, but the manga and anime’s main character is Legoshi, an enormous grey wolf.
Legoshi is a member of Cherryton Academy’s prestigious drama department, though at the start he is part of the crew, not the cast. Chapter One of Beastars opens with Legoshi’s friend and fellow drama club member, Tem the Alpaca, being slaughtered in the drama studio.
Tem’s death sets in motion a murder mystery, as well as a political ripple effect that will echo through the school and the entire town, as divides between herbivores and carnivores, widen. This opening should be reason enough to read Beastars.
This binary between herbivores and carnivores is explored in myriad clever ways as the Beastars manga and anime progress. The binary asks big questions about social roles, the class system, gender roles, biases and prejudices, sexism and racism, and even more besides.
As this slice-of-life manga escalates, questions about nature and nurture, instinct, fate, and societal pressures and expectations grow larger with the introduction of Haru, a white dwarf rabbit who proves herself to be one of the most complexly written female protagonists in Manga.
My Lesbian Experience with Loneliness by Kabi Nagata
Translated by Jocelyne Allen
My Lesbian Experience with Loneliness is the story of Kabi, a woman who decided against attending university, and spent her early twenties in a haze of depression, drifting through jobs at stores and bakeries, when she finds the energy to do so, she writes manga.
She neither avoids nor seeks out friends, companionship, or sex. She simply exists. She begins with one eating disorder and moves on to another. She loses her job and finds another. She lives with her parents and often fails to find the will to leave her bedroom.
Eventually, as we see in the flash-forward opening pages, she arrives, age twenty-eight, at a turning point. She decides to hire a female escort and a room at a love hotel, in order to learn and understand all that she believes she has missed out on in her youth.
These sexual desires and experiences she has distorted into fear and anxiety in her mind. This slice-of-life manga shows us the slice of a life that is still being lived, and as such, has no real beginning or end.
It is like a camera being set to record on a random day and switched off on another. And in that space of time, we get a voyeuristic look at a life of loneliness, fear, and confusion.
Our Dreams at Dusk by Yuhki Kamatani
Translated by Jocelyne Allen
Tasuku Kaname is a gay teenager trying desperately to come to terms with his sexual identity and find peace within it, all the while he is bullied and shunned by his classmates.
Slowly, he is introduced to a selection of colorful queer characters who all have their own struggles and their own lessons to teach Kaname.
Our Dreams at Dusk is a gorgeously drawn queer slice-of-life manga, full of love for the entire queer community. It celebrates the act of love and, specifically, of loving oneself above everything else.
This queer manga explores the dangers of marginalization and the strength it takes to overcome, find a community, and feel loved. It is very much a story of empathy, love, and community.
Wolf Children (Ōkami Kodomo no Ame to Yuki) by Mamoru Hosoda (Story) and Yū (Art)
Translated by Jocelyne Allen
Wolf Children is best known as an anime film, written and directed by Mamoru Hosoda, but Hosoda also penned a slice-of-life manga adaptation of Wolf Children alongside the movie, with illustrations handled by manga artist Yū.
Hosoda’s Wolf Children begins with Hana, a university student in Tokyo who falls in love with a man who soon reveals that he has the power to transform into a wolf. To call him a werewolf would give the wrong impression; he is less cursed and more gifted with the ability to transform at will.
Together, they have two children: Ame and Yuki (rain and snow), but their father dies when they are both very young.
Hana finds herself forced to flee the city and find a home for her children in the countryside. She befriends her neighbors, fixes up a dilapidated old house, and does her best to raise two children with the ability to transform into wolves.
Wolf Children is a charming heartache of a slice-of-life manga. It is sometimes quiet and understated but always moving and sweet.
Orange by Ichigo Takano
Translated by Lasse Christian Christiansen and Amber Tamosaitis
Written and drawn by Ichigo Takano, Orange is a thought-provoking and heartwarming slice-of-life manga told through the eyes of its main protagonist, Naho, a second-year high school student.
We also follow the story of Naho’s 27-year-old future self (seen mostly through letters from the future). But while Orange is told through her eyes, it is hardly her story alone.
This beautiful slice-of-life manga is a story about Naho, her friendships, and the sacrifices she and her friends are willing to make to save a person they all love.
Orange takes place in Matsumoto, a small city in northern Nagano, and is largely set in the high school that Naho attends with her group of friends – Suwa, Azu, Hagita, and Chino. However, in the very first chapter, we are introduced to a new addition, a transfer student from Tokyo named Kakeru.
Before we meet Kakeru, the day begins with Naho receiving a letter from someone who claims to be her from ten years in the future. This future self tells Naho that, today, she will meet Kakeru.
The letter also includes instructions on how to save Kakeru, something that the Naho of the future failed to do, and has had to live with that regret.
When she gets to school, she does indeed meet Kakeru, and he is quickly assimilated into her group of friends. As the story continues, we learn more about not only Kakeru but every fleshed-out member of this group of high schoolers.
Naho, Kakeru, and the other four are incredibly well-realized characters with quirks, wants, loves, and detailed backgrounds. You’ll come to love each of them in their own way.
The story of this slice-of-life manga, however, toes a line of being wholesome and heartwarming while also exploring difficult themes of mental health and suicide.
Given by Natsuki Kizu
Translated by Junko Goda
Given is a BL (boys’ love) slice-of-life manga that has gained quite the following, with an excellent anime and movie as well. The story of this manga really dives head-first into what it means to discover your sexuality and deal with the loss of loved ones.
Given is the story of two high school students, Uenoyama and Mafuyu, and two university students, Kaji and Haruki, who are all in love with music.
Uenoyama and Mafuyu meet in the stairwell of their school while skipping class. Mafuyu has a mysterious guitar that he can’t play and asks Uenoyama, a music prodigy, to teach him.
At first, Uenoyama refuses but is soon begging Mafuyu to join his band with Haruki and Kaji because of his beautiful yet melancholic vocals. With permission from Haruki and Kaji, Mafuyu joins the band.
However, there is more to Mafuyu than meets the eye. He has experienced a terrible loss that he is unable to put into words. He has a very difficult time voicing how he feels but has an uncanny awareness of the situations of others.
Through the band, Mafuyu finds his voice again and helps the other members deal with their own pasts.
My Brother’s Husband by Gengoroh Tagame
Translated by Anne Ishii
My Brother’s Husband tells the story of Yaichi, a single father with an adorable young daughter named Kana, and the arrival of Mike, a bear-like Canadian who has come to share his grief and comfort after the death of his husband and Yaichi’s twin brother, Ryoji.
All signs point to a tale of acceptance at the start of this queer slice-of-life manga, with Yaichi struggling to deal with the presence of a huge gay gaijin in his house.
It is clear from the beginning that Yaichi did not accept his brother’s sexuality or his immigration to Canada. Furthermore, Kana, a young and infinitely positive child who sees the good in everything, emphasizes the theme of acceptance.
Kana is unburdened enough by social constraints to see how two men marrying could be anything other than a great (and ordinary) thing.
Yaichi will overcome his prejudices with the help of his sweet and loving daughter, gradually coming to see Mike as a person, accepting him as family, and eventually learning to forgive himself for being so cold toward his brother in the years leading up to his departure from Japan.