Shoujo Classics from the Masters

🌹Genre-defining, highly popular, and influential classics of Shoujo (girls') manga, all bestsellers in their demographic or influential series by the Year 24 Group.🌹

✨The Year 24 Group was a group of manga creators (mangaka), all women, who redefined shoujo manga in the 1970s, focusing on contemporary problems and high-stakes, emotional drama as well as defining shoujo's signature style of big, emotional splash pages, beautiful men, using imagery to illustrate emotional states, and on-panel text to denote inner thoughts - all visuals used across all genres of manga to this day. The Year 24 Group is also credited with creating the genre of BL, aka BoysLove, sometimes called shounen ai, as well as pioneering GL, GirlsLove or yuri.✨

🎀All of these have official English releases and were first printed in magazines for girls.🎀

💖Expect sparkles, pounding hearts, and romance, and BL, but also science fiction, fantasy, action and melodrama!💖

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created by farron

last updated July, 2026

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Comments

So this is how I find out just how damned inaccessible a bunch of the Year 24 Group stuff is if you don't read Japanese. I wanted to include more but we still don't have an official English translation of Kaze to Ki no Uta?? In the year of our god 2026??

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For the sake of having a variety of entries I will be adding other influential shoujo manga, especially from famous creators, but it needs to have run in a shoujo magazine or otherwise adhere to the conceits of the genre.

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(wait hear me out, add them in jpn or list titles in the comments? bc i am curious and would like to check some out 🙂‍↕️)

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I've added some in a comment!

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yippeee thank you farron 🫶

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Edited

Other works of interest I don't know much about, but would probably include if I could find out more and there were official English translations: 夢の碑 (Yume no Ishibumi, Monument of Dreams) by Toshie Kihara 摩利と新吾 (Mari to Shingo, Mari and Shingo) by Toshie Kihara 綿の国星 (Wata no kuni hoshi, The Star of Cottonland) by Yumiko Oshima, or other works Shoujo works by Minori Kimura

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Edited

Here is a list of manga I would like to include on this list that don't have official English translations as far as I know. You may be able to find them in other language translation editions or fan-translated on the internet, and of course, in Japanese.

おにいさまへ… (Oniisama ee..., "Dear Brother") by Riyoko Ikeda ガラスの仮面 (Garasu kamen, "Glass Mask") by Suze Miuchi 風と木の詩 (Kaze to ki no uta, "The Song of the Wind and Trees") by Keiko Takemiya 日出処の天子 (Hi Izuro Tokoro no Tenshi, "Emperor of the Land of the Rising Sun") by Ryoko Yamagishi パタリロ! (Patalliro!) by Mineo Maya

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This is such a cool idea for a list, thank you for making it!! And right? I can’t believe Kaze to Ki no Uta and Oniisama E are still without EN translations in 2026! I would’ve expected a company that covers more “niche” works to have picked them up by now—maybe UDON since they did ROV, or Fantagraphics since they did the Poe Clan?? Either way, it’s wild that they’re not yet officially licensed in English. My girlfriend is super into shoujo history, so she’s often lamenting the lack of EN accessibility to it, and rightfully so!!

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Thank you!! I was surprised we didn't have a more precise shoujo listing that I could find, but then I remembered not everyone spends every waking moment obsessing over the history of yaoi and BL or the Year 24 Group like me.

I haven't checked out the new ROV or Poe Clan printings, but I like what I've seen of Fantagraphic's work publishing Yudori's Raging Clouds (even though I ... didn't care for the story), and given what's in that I could see them embracing the more iffy content that seems to be a bugbear for Kaze. Honestly I'd be quite curious to see their sales metrics because it feels like smaller publishers may be the way to go, as a lot of these series are sadly only growing less known and less relevant (to Westerners) over the years. On the other hand, these series have done pretty well in Europe, though they have different legacies there.

My white whale would be Moto Hagio's A Cruel God Reigns Over All which I read via Italian-to-English fan-translations from magazine scans ages ago. I can't truly argue that it has cultural significance like much of Hagio's other work, it's just my personal favorite. 😭

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I totally agree about smaller publishers! I’ve always wondered the same thing about sales metrics, I wish I could see those details. It’s something I really wish I was privy to LOL 😭 I’m not super in the know when it comes to Y24 works, but I know that my girlfriend’s personal wish for a translated English title—aside from Oniisama E—is Ayako or Shoko no Etude by Ikeda. In terms of newer shoujo, I am personally very partial to CLAMP, but I’m lucky in that their stuff is more translated!!

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CLAMP has a ton of crossover appeal, so between that an the extreme marketability of Cardcaptor Sakura (not that it isn't also a delightful series) I think it makes a lot of sense how much attention it gets! I really love CLAMP's older stuff, like X and RG Veda and Rayearth, but that's probably not a surprise coming from an old fogey like me. I do think even they are starting to become less relevant as younger fans are naturally more attracted to more recent series.

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oh my god so many peak titles in this one 🤩 this is a fantastic list, farron thank you for putting this together!

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Ahhh I love this list! Fruits Basket really takes me back. 😭💖

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thanks for making this!! love seeing Riyoko Ikeda, Ai Yazawa, Banana Fish and Clamp on this list 🩵 as a side tangent, Im curious if Oniisama-e by Riyoko Ikeda also counts as a shoujo classic? :0

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I would absolutely count it, I'm actually working on a comment with a list of titles I would have preferred to include that don't have official English translations. I'm pretty appalled that title and Kaze to ki no uta don't have one.

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I have only heard of the Rose of Versailles so I’m excited to see more! Going to use this list to refer back to when I find any of them to read. 😍

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Well small correction now that there is more added I have read some others. Definitely welcome more new potential faves. 👍🏻

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ugh this looks like an absolute dreaaaam thanks for compiling!!

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TYSM! I worked really hard to vet this with titles I thought a majority of PBers could potentially get a hold of, though one or two of them are still a bit iffy.

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Omg, From Eroica with Love 🥺💕 It has a special place in my heart as it brought me so much joy in my scariest, loneliest months. I'm a sucker for their dynamics, action and humour.

Also X/1999!! S'been so long I've heard of that name!! I remember rooting for Sorata and Arashi 🤣

Too bad both are on an indefinite hiatus... 🥲

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I haven't gotten to From Eroica with Love yet but I'm hoping to get to it this year! Its influence is legendary!

I admit to being a toxic Seishiro/Subaru shipper. Actually, now that I think about it, it might be the origin of some of my preferences. 😅

It's so sad they're on hiatus! Nana too!!! And these days shoujo manga hardly breaks through in popularity compared to them! 😭

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Ooo yes, it's a fun read! Hope you get to find them! 👀

Omggg Seishiro/Subaru was GOLD! 🤣 I heard there's also more of their storyline in Tokyo Babylon but I have not read that one. Even so, I love their arc a lot in X/1999. 🥲

Aye 😭 At present, there are a lot more choices (manhwa, manhua) so reading is probably more spread out now. 🥲

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Tokyo Babylon was... cute, from what I remember, but I read it a loooong time ago, same with Duklyon: Clamp School Defenders and Clamp School Detectives. Those two I remember feeling rather rough and dated even back when I read them.

I think there's a lot going on with demographic blurring and online distribution right now! I'm glad that there's more variety to choose from, and the lower financial risk of online distribution has already led to some really interesting things that might not have gotten picked up getting more popular (The Summer Hikaru Died is a good example, I think), but I'm always going to wish that various platforms did more to encourage innovation. I feel like there's an expectation that "female readership" in manga will always be on board for things with "male readership" so girl and women oriented titles have been allowed to languish.

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This is awesome! Regarding the description, alongside BL I believe the Year 24 group were also instrumental in the creation of the genre yuri, through Ryoko Yamagishi’s 1971 work Shiroi Heya no Futari" (The Couple in the White Room), which also established S class and crimson rose x candy girl archetypes that are iconic in yuri even today. I can see it might be difficult to include titles with no English translation on the list (though I believe Shiroi Heya no Futari is on Pagebound), but I think it would be really cool if yuri could be mentioned alongside BL in the description as this history is often forgotten, and yuri is so misunderstood now and seen as a “male gaze” genre despite having been created by and for women!

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I've added shiroi heya no futari, and thank you for bringing my attention to my oversight there. Initially this list grew out of a hope to make a related manga quest and would have therefore been limited to volumes available to English readers, as well as being a smaller in scale, and wanting to keep things simple. I had gathered that yuri/Class S manga was considered somewhat separate from the developments of the Year 24 group, but in the list's current iteration it was wrong to leave it out. I do feel that yuri has a somewhat muddied reputation and I should not have contributed to that.

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Yay!! I think you’re doing a great job of curating regardless and I was very happy to come across such a list on the app at all, totally agree that the history is complex and not always super accessible! 😊

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