yamai
Manga

Kanata Yoshino (Bloody Brat) Launches New Manga

Kodansha’s Comic Days platform recently launched Kanata Yoshino’s intriguing new manga series, Yamai wa Ke kara – Shinri-shi Dōman no Sōdan-shitsu – (Illness Comes from the Supernatural – Psychologist Dōman’s Counseling Room -) on March 22. Blending psychological mystery with supernatural elements, the series immediately stands out for its premise: a psychologist who specializes in the uncanny is called upon to help clients whose troubles may be caused by spiritual, paranormal, or otherworldly phenomena.

yamai
Image via Monthly Shonen Sirius magazine’s X/Twitter account

What Yamai wa Ke kara Is About

At its core, Yamai wa Ke kara follows Dōman, a psychologist whose specialty is far from ordinary therapy: he counsels people afflicted by problems that appear to have supernatural origins. Each chapter frames a case — sometimes eerie, sometimes tragic — where psychological understanding and otherworldly realities intersect. Expect an episodic structure that allows for atmospheric storytelling while gradually revealing deeper threads connecting the characters, the town, and Dōman himself.

About the Creator: Kanata Yoshino

Kanata Yoshino is no stranger to manga readers. Yoshino has previously worked on four-panel spinoffs and short manga projects connected to established series, demonstrating a talent for character-driven humor and tight pacing. That experience with compact storytelling serves Yoshino well here: the new series leans into mood and character beats, delivering unsettling moments that land precisely because they’re economically written and visually focused.

Past Works and Influence

Yoshino’s earlier four-panel works (including spinoff pieces tied to other franchises) showcased skills in timing, visual comedy, and character quirks. In Yamai wa Ke kara, those abilities are repurposed for a very different tone — one that favors tension, melancholy, and creeping dread over punchlines. Readers who appreciated Yoshino’s clarity and economy in earlier pieces will find those same strengths repurposed for atmospheric horror and psychological drama.


Publication Details and Where to Read

The series launched on Kodansha’s Comic Days website. If you want to read the original release, visit the Comic Days entry for the first chapter (external link, nofollow). The serialization on a major digital platform like Comic Days suggests Kodansha is positioning the title for steady chapter releases and broad accessibility.

Also Read:  Yen Press To Release The Intuition of Haruhi Suzumiya on Digital Platform

Read the first chapter on Comic Days (no follow)

Themes and Narrative Expectations

Yamai wa Ke kara plays with multiple thematic layers:

  • Psychological vs. Supernatural: The central tension pits clinical interpretation against phenomena that defy rational explanation. This allows for probing character studies — are the “illnesses” truly paranormal, or residues of trauma and grief manifesting as something else?
  • Isolation and Community: Small-town rumor, shared histories, and collective fears are fertile ground for the manga’s cases. How a community responds to inexplicable events can be as revealing as the events themselves.
  • Ethics of Care: Dōman’s role raises questions about responsibility when a therapist confronts forces beyond scientific understanding. His methods, empathy, and limitations become a narrative fulcrum.

Character Focus

While Dōman is the anchor, the series highlights the people who seek him out — victims, skeptics, and those caught between belief and denial. These episodic profiles can build empathy quickly, and Yoshino uses concise characterization to make each case resonate emotionally.


Art Style and Presentation

Visually, Yamai wa Ke kara balances clear, readable paneling with atmospheric shading and design. The art leans toward realism in character expressions, which heightens the emotional stakes when bizarre events occur. Background work and panel rhythm contribute strongly to tension: quiet panels linger, while sudden visual beats shock without feeling gratuitous.

Why This Series Matters

There’s been a growing appetite in manga for stories that fuse psychological realism with supernatural elements — titles that explore the human consequences of the inexplicable rather than relying solely on spectacle. Yamai wa Ke kara fits squarely into this niche, offering readers a thoughtful, mood-driven take that can attract fans of mystery, horror, and character drama alike.

Who Should Read It

  • Fans of psychological horror and supernatural mysteries.
  • Readers who enjoy character-focused, episodic storytelling.
  • Those who appreciate compact, well-paced chapters that emphasize atmosphere over action.

Final thoughts

Yamai wa Ke kara – Shinri-shi Dōman no Sōdan-shitsu – marks a promising new direction for Kanata Yoshino, blending tight storytelling with a haunting premise. Its launch on Comic Days gives it visibility, and the early chapters demonstrate a confident balance of mood, character, and mystery. If you’re drawn to manga that linger in the mind after the final panel, this series deserves a spot on your reading list.