Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

吸血姫 美夕 [Vampire Miyu] #4

Vampire Princess Miyu, Vol. 04

Rate this book
Vampire Miyu 4 - bk635; Carlsen Verlag; Toshiki Hirano & Narumi Kakinouchi; pocket_book; 2001

210 pages, Paperback

First published January 5, 1999

1 person is currently reading
59 people want to read

About the author

Narumi Kakinouchi

121 books33 followers
Narumi Kakinouchi (垣野内成美) is a female Japanese manga artist, animator, director, character designer, and an animation director. Some of her work has appeared in the adult manga magazine Lemon People.

After graduating from high school, she began working at Studio Beebo under the direction of Tomonori Kogawa, then moving on to Studio Io, Artland, AIC and other studios where she was an animator, designer, and animation director on many TV series and OVAs. She made her manga and character designer debut with Vampire Princess Miyu. Due to her magnificent artwork, she became very popular even outside the anime and manga scene, doing illustrations and character designs for many other projects.

Kakinouchi made her key animation debut with her work on the 1980 series Space Runaway Ideon. She then garnered great attention as the character designer, storyboard artist, and animation director for the Vampire Princess Miyu OVAs in 1988, and in March of that same year she co-authored the first Vampire Princess Miyu manga, serialized in the mystery/horror monthly manga magazine Susperia.

She made her directorial debut with Ryokunohara Labyrinth in 1990, in addition to being the character designer, scenario creator, storyboard artis, and animation director for the OVA.

Kakinouchi is married to anime director Toshiki Hirano.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
24 (24%)
4 stars
40 (40%)
3 stars
25 (25%)
2 stars
7 (7%)
1 star
4 (4%)
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Mizuki.
3,413 reviews1,422 followers
January 23, 2015
3.5 stars.

In Vol. 4, Miyu banished an incubus from human world and sent him back to the Darkness, but the incubus's lover (a human girl) was overcame with rage and sorrow, and the heartbroken girl was hellbent to get revenge.

I like how Miyu's flaws are being revealed and highlighted in this volume, in this story she came very close to harm/kill the human girl, when killing of humans is sternly forbidden (saves only when the humans allowed Miyu to drink their blood or when they took up her offer of eternal dreams willingly).

Still, I don't really like how the outcome of the battle among Miyu, the human girl and the three other demons (who helped the girl). So I can only give it 3.5 stars.
Profile Image for Bibliothecat.
1,824 reviews81 followers
November 14, 2025


Review for complete series



Miyu, guardian of the lost shinma, banishes the demons to their darkness and prevents their contact with humans. But not all humans want to be apart from the shinma – and not all shinma are evil. With that, Miyu does not only face the lost shinma of this world, but also threats of revenge from both sides. Yet it seems there is an eternity left before her task is won.

Vampire Princess Miyu is one of the most confusing manga I have come across and that is mainly due to its clumsy start. You are tossed into the story without much explanation of what shinma are, what Miyu is (other than a vampire but it is obvious that she is not your traditional vampire) or what exactly happens to the people whose blood she takes. After reading a volume or two (and with the help of a little research) I got the gist of it and was able to follow the story for the most of it. It is still rather confusing and the beginning is very episodic – that also makes it more difficult to get into.

As mentioned, Miyu is a vampire. But she is certainly not your traditional vampire. One could describe her as a combination of Western vampires and Japanese lore. What Miyu has in common with Western vampires is her need for blood, her immortality and cold and pale skin. However, she can move freely in daylight and does not take any harm by things such as crosses or holy water. She is not a vampire because she herself was bitten once; she is a vampire because she is half human and half demon.

With her half-blood, she became immortal during her mid-teens and stopped ageing physically. She makes a rather intriguing character because she is neither good nor evil. She hunts the demons called shinma and sends them back into the darkness because it is her duty. She hardly ever lets her emotions get in the way of that. Because of that, she leaves a trail of angry people who come to seek revenge. On top of that, it often seems as though there are two different personalities within her. One of her former life as a human, and one of the immortal demon guardian. Sometimes she will be childlike and has a rather cheeky and playful side to her. But then she can be a competent and serious opponent when her duty calls.

Her whole of being a vampire and needing blood seems vastly secondary; when she drinks someone’s blood, she also gives them their eternal dream. It seems these people either die or continue living in a kind of trance in which their soul lives on in their most desperate dream. In most cases, it is shown as her doing these people a favour. She is giving them their dearest dreams rather than letting them suffer on and grow old in a cruel world. I heard someone say they think Miyu is shallow because she only chooses “beautiful” victims. I would have to disagree with that, though; my interpretation is that she chooses victims with beautiful souls (not that that rules out a beautiful appearance). She has also given it to those who she believes deserve that happiness.

Despite Miyu’s neutrality throughout most of the series – she has let one or the other shinma slip away who eventually became her friends and allies. Most notably, her partner Larva. He was a shinma who was sent to kill her before she became immortal. Instead, he was there when she awoke as a guardian and has been her loyal friend and servant ever since.

Miyu sometimes appears to sway between acceptance of her immortal life and longing and sad memories of her childhood. She questions the loneliness that comes with immortality and feels as though she has failed her mother by not staying human. This gives the series an overall melancholic feeling. While it is tagged as horror, I would not classify it as such. It is a rather dark story with many tragic fates. It is not the type of book you would want to read to make yourself feel good.

So after putting some thought into what exactly Vampire Princess Miyu is about, I am not sure whether to say that this is a good or bad manga (which is always subjective anyway). I have to confess that I found it somewhat dull – it had quite a few boring moments and, as mentioned before, it is confusing and hard to get into. However, there is a uniqueness to it that makes it interesting in its own right and one does start to get drawn into the story once one spends time with the characters. Somewhere halfway through the series, it becomes less episodic and has a few longer arcs and plot points that make it look like an actual story.

However, the one biggest plus for Vampire Princess Miyu is the art. I do not think the covers represent the art very well as they do not show off the beauty of what is found inside. Kakinouchi Narumi has one of the most beautiful art styles out there. She draws the characters with such grace – the textiles and hair in particular. Not to mention the hands; she draws some of the most beautiful hands ever. It is worth flipping through one of her books just for the sake of looking that those hands!
Profile Image for Starbubbles.
1,668 reviews126 followers
December 10, 2010
i was honestly on the edge of my seat the entire time while reading this one. the entire time!
so why not 5 stars? well part of it was that i was unsure if the series would end with this volume. since they were packaged in a group of four, and i never see this series around, i was unsure. so part of the suspense was trying to figure out how things would wrap up. but honestly, it was great. a stray shinma is a stray shinma, and well miyu is terrible at being cold hearted. she tries, but reiha really proves that she isn't. but it's not like she can fully explain to anyone that she understands loneliness, the feeling of loss, and that she has a job to do above all else. even when miyu tries to, the great example of yuma proves that they don't care to hear or know.
Profile Image for Harumichi Mizuki.
2,532 reviews76 followers
October 15, 2016
There was implicit sexual scene between a human girl named Yuma and Tsubaki, a demon whose appearance was like a girl too (but seemed that the demon was actually male). She lost her mind when Miyu slayed her lover. Now Miyu had to face a human as her new enemy.

I really hate this kind of melancholy.

Oh, and three more unclear demon characters appeared. They were the friends of Tsubaki who came for revenge. But apparently, one of the demons named Fuji fell in love with Yuma and died to protect her.

Sweet?

Heuh. I was not even impressed a single bit with the twist. The series of scenes were shown one to another just because Narumi wanted them to be in the story. And there were still 6 more volumes, DAMN!


Profile Image for octrivia deliani.
11 reviews
February 16, 2010
Target Miyu kali ini merupakan para iblis mimpi. Tsubaki, yang merupakan salah satu iblis mimpi sedang menjalin kasih dengan seorang gadis manusia yang bernama Yuma berhasil dikembalikan ke dalam kegelapan oleh Miyu. Iblis mimpi yang tersisa berniat untuk membalas dendam pada Miyu yang telah mengembalikan Tsubaki pada kegelapan dengan memperalat Yuma.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews