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Hideyuki Kikuchi

Author of Vampire Hunter D

185+ Works 5,255 Members 58 Reviews 6 Favorited

About the Author

Disambiguation Notice:

Please DO NOT combine the manga and novel versions of Vampire Hunter D. They are entirely different entities. Thank you!

Series

Works by Hideyuki Kikuchi

Vampire Hunter D (1983) 767 copies, 18 reviews
Raiser of Gales (1985) 452 copies, 1 review
Demon Deathchase (1985) 357 copies, 1 review
Tale of the Dead Town (1986) 256 copies, 1 review
The Stuff of Dreams (1986) 250 copies, 1 review
Pilgrimage of the Sacred and the Profane (1988) 231 copies, 1 review
Vampire Hunter D, Volume 1 (2007) 210 copies, 10 reviews
The Rose Princess (1994) 166 copies, 1 review
Dark Nocturne (1992) 159 copies, 2 reviews
Pale Fallen Angel (Parts One & Two) (1994) 128 copies, 2 reviews
Vampire Hunter D, Volume 2 (2008) 111 copies, 2 reviews
Pale Fallen Angels (Parts Three & Four) (1995) 105 copies, 2 reviews
Vampire Hunter D, Volume 3 (2009) 77 copies
Dark Road (Parts One & Two) (1999) 75 copies
A Wind Named Amnesia / Invader Summer (2010) 66 copies, 1 review
Dark Road (Part Three) (1999) 65 copies
Darkside Blues (2004) 48 copies
Vampire Hunter D, Volume 4 (2009) 47 copies
Mercenary Road (2013) 38 copies
Dark Wars: The Tale of Meiji Dracula (2008) 36 copies, 3 reviews
Vampire Hunter D, Volume 5 (2010) 36 copies
Wicked City: Black Guard (2009) 35 copies
Fortress of the Elder God (2012) 34 copies
Scenes from an Unholy War (2013) 31 copies
Record of the Blood Battle (2014) 27 copies
Steel Angel Kurumi Volume 4 (2004) 26 copies
Yashakiden: The Demon Princess, Book 1 (2009) 25 copies, 1 review
White Devil Mountain (2015) 25 copies
Iriya the Berserker (2016) 24 copies
Throng of Heretics (2016) 23 copies
Noble V: Greylancer (2013) 22 copies, 1 review
Undead Island (2017) 21 copies
Bedeviled Stagecoach (2017) 20 copies
Wicked City: The Other Side (2010) 18 copies, 1 review
Taimashin SPI (2004) 15 copies, 2 reviews
Vampire Hunter D Volume 27 (2018) 13 copies
Yashakiden: The Demon Princess, Book 2 (2010) 11 copies, 1 review
Demon City Hunter, Vol. 1 (2003) 11 copies
Tales of the Ghost Sword (2013) 8 copies
Yashakiden: The Demon Princess, Book 3 (2010) 5 copies, 1 review
Maohden (Novel) (2012) 4 copies
幽剣抄 (2004) 3 copies
紅蜘蛛男爵 (1996) 2 copies
魔王軍団 妖人篇 (1999) 2 copies
追撃者 (1995) 2 copies
Hell Doctor Mephisto (1988) 2 copies
妖魔戦線 (1985) 2 copies
淫界伝 (1993) 2 copies
Vampire Hunter D 1-15 (1986) 2 copies
Vampire Hunter D 1-41 (1996) 2 copies
Vampire Hunter D 1-36 (1994) 2 copies
Vampire Hunter D 03: BD 3 (2009) 2 copies
Vampire Hunter D 07 (2014) 2 copies
Vampire Hunter D 1-18 (1986) 1 copy
Vampire Hunter D 1-14 (1985) 1 copy
Youth Demon 1 copy
聖杯魔団 (1994) 1 copy
Vampire Hunter D 1-25 (1988) 1 copy
Vampire Hunter D 1-21 (1988) 1 copy
Vampire Hunter D 08 (2016) 1 copy
Jashin kettoden : Kuturu uesutan. (2015) 1 copy, 1 review
D‐薔薇姫 (1994) 1 copy

Associated Works

The Future is Japanese (2012) — Contributor — 170 copies, 8 reviews
Vampiric: Tales of Blood and Roses from Japan (2019) — Author — 6 copies, 1 review
Magic Needle, Volume 4 (2002) — Author — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
菊地秀行
Birthdate
1949-09-25
Gender
male
Nationality
Japan
Places of residence
Chiba, Japan
Education
Aoyama Gakuin University
Occupations
novelist
Disambiguation notice
Please DO NOT combine the manga and novel versions of Vampire Hunter D. They are entirely different entities. Thank you!

Members

Reviews

Loved the anime. Took forever to read the book. Very dry, very flat. As a novelization, I was surprised just how much was not "extra" to the movie version. No depth, no building of characters, and I don't think I'll read further in the series.
 
Flagged
Murphy-Jacobs | 17 other reviews | May 8, 2024 |
This was a proper nostalgia kick for me, since I used to swallow these books as a teen. For every flaw of Kikuchi's, there was something that had me falling in love with the series all over again. It's common for people to claim poor translation, and I really can't comment on that, but there are times when the writing is so clunky it's downright hilarious; there are some things that a mistranslation can't excuse.

The appeal for me is largely in the combination of world-building, the unique character of D, and Kickuchi's endearing blend of multiple classic genres. The setting is just wonderful: a sort of post-post apocalypse. Initially, a nuclear war sets man back hundreds of years, at which point the vampires of legend rise out of the shadows and take advantage of a wounded world. They rule over the now archaic human civilisation as "Nobility" and, picking up where man has let off, develop a highly advanced technological society. Over the course of time, they reach out to the stars and colonise planets; there are wars with extra-terrestrials, mankind finds its spine and rebels, which eventually leads to an even more chaotic and broken world. The "Capital" is a remnant of this technological society that now remains clean of and protected from the Nobility, but everything outside of this is "the frontier", which functions much like the lawless West. Bloodthirsty nobles are presented as a dying aristocracy that get what they can take, but are prevented from regaining total control by the presence of skilled bounty/vampire hunters. D, the main character, is a half-breed and therefore an outcast to both Nobility and humanity. Nevertheless, he is one such skilled hunter who people will call on when convenient. Along with a left hand infected with a sentient parasite, D's cold demeanour and hinted origins make for a unique and mysterious protagonist.

This first book was never really a highlight for me in the series, and it looks like that's still the case. Regardless of the role which translation plays here, Kickuchi's prose comes across very, very bad in English. I don't remember it being quite this bad - I'm hoping it gets better. It's a bizarre mix of gothic atmosphere, flowery description, laughable dialogue and messy, chaotic action. It's sometimes effective, but more often childish, clunky and confusing. At its best, it can be accepted as fun, pulpy schlock, which sits right at home with its origins. Kikuchi wears his influences on his sleeve, dedicating the book to Terrence Fisher of Hammer Horror fame, and Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing, notable in their roles as Dracula and Van Helsing, respectably. Shane, a quintessential Western, makes its presence known here also. The young boy in that is much like little Dan here, who idolises and looks up to D. Like the stranger, Shane, D waltzes into the lives of a family one day and acts as a mentor, protector, and even a farm hand. But he's only there for a season, and once he's saved the day, "off to the dusty trails" he goes.

Vampire Hunter D is pulpy because its influences are pulpy, but, if anything, it is elevated by its attempt to expand on its treading of cliches with big ideas and genre-blending. According to my memory, the stories do get better, and the world gets richer, but D remains as mysterious as ever. The book that started it all is an occasionally enjoyable - but mostly tolerable - foundation for a beautiful mess that would come after. I will be rereading the next book, but we'll see after that. My senses are still recovering from the assault.
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Flagged
TheScribblingMan | 17 other reviews | Aug 6, 2023 |
Kikuchi is bugnutz crazy.
 
Flagged
3Oranges | Jun 24, 2023 |
This self-described Cthulhu Western is a very traditional western hammered into a very traditional Cthulhu mythos mold to make something uniquely fun. The writer wears his tastes on his sleeve, writing a western based deeply in the Hollywood 1950s movie tradition: famous gunslingers, nefarious train companies running honest farmers off their land, and deadly natives. Add to that Deep Ones, Cthulhu magic, and seemingly deathless villains, and you get quite an adventure.

This does mean, of course, that many of the more nuanced views that have started to shape the American view of the west, particularly recognition of the terrible treatment of Native Americans and Black people, are absent. The Native Americans in this story are enemies, if ones on perhaps more equal terms with the protagonists than was common in the old western tradition, and the only black characters are nameless servants.

One rather interesting element is the addition of the Japanese character Shinobi, and the recurring equation of his Japanese-ness with the Native Americans by malevolent white characters--it adds a wrinkle to the treatment of race in this one that is worth thinking about.

Overall, there is little original ground tread here, but the author makes no bones about it: This is a product of his love of old western movies, and his interest in Lovecraft's malevolent world building. If you go into it looking for that, you won't be disappointed.
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Flagged
JimDR | Dec 7, 2022 |

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Statistics

Works
185
Also by
3
Members
5,255
Popularity
#4,747
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
58
ISBNs
275
Languages
10
Favorited
6

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