Stop!! Hibari-kun!
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Stop!! Hibari-kun!

Alternative Titles

Japanese: ストップ!! ひばりくん!


Information

Type: Manga
Volumes: 4
Chapters: 53
Status: Finished
Published: Oct 6, 1981 to Nov 22, 1983
Genres: Comedy Comedy, Romance Romance
Themes: Crossdressing Crossdressing, Gag Humor Gag Humor
Demographic: Shounen Shounen
Serialization: Shounen Jump (Weekly)
Authors: Eguchi, Hisashi (Story & Art)

Statistics

Score: 6.931 (scored by 19101,910 users)
1 indicates a weighted score.
Ranked: #102112
2 based on the top manga page. Please note that 'R18+' titles are excluded.
Popularity: #3697
Members: 6,133
Favorites: 119

Resources

Recommendations

Stop!! Hibari-kun! is the romcom version of Okaeri Alice. Both have a boy desired by a blonde trans girl, and both boys barely can't resist to their beauty and sensuality. While Stop!! is funny and makes you laugh, Okaeri has that painful Oshimi's style that makes you suffer.  
reportRecommended by LinoTheOne
If you're looking for another story with trans women, you may be interested in this one too. 
reportRecommended by Xuhate
Akira Toriyama and Hisashi Eguchi both influenced each other a lot during the 80's. The influence of Dr. Slump-style comedy in Stop!! Hibari-kun is glaring. Both manga were published simultaneously on Shounen Jump - Hibari-kun starting a year later - and, on this manga, it's quite clear that Eguchi tried to copy Akira Toriyama's style of writing and drawing. In some pages, it feels you're actually reading Dr. Slump. However, Hibari-kun, on it's own, is no Dr. Slump copy. Eguchi's manga main theme is Hibari-kun's crossdressing (or transgenderism, on a modern interpretation). Most jokes revolve around Hibari-kun being so pretty that, even though other people know that  read more 
reportRecommended by yokoelf
Both manga are cute stories about the lives of a transgender girl, and Shuuichi and Hibari both struck me as extremely relatable portrayals of transgender girls. The stories are tonally different, yes: Hibari is a light-hearted, comedic story with the protagonist being a badass daughter of a Yakuza boss, while Wandering Son is more serious and Shuuichi is more of a soft-spoken, quiet character; but both stories are very similar thematically. Both explore their lives and the difficulties they face living in a transphobic society, with both Hibari and Shuuichi having rather un-supportive families and needing to stay closeted towards much of their social circle.  read more 
reportRecommended by AceJade