There is a land of perpetual night... a land called Amberground. Where the light of the man-made sun that shines over the capitol cannot reach... a rare breed of government agents travels this dark, dangerous territory on official business. People entrust these agents... with their HEARTS. And they have sworn to deliver... to deliver... letters. In all things... the heart must take precedence. The heart rules over all things... and all things come from the heart.
Is a manga by Hiroyuki Asada. It is set in the world of Amberground, a land where dozens of diverse and scattered towns are connected by the Letter Bees, an elite cadre of men and women who deliver letters, packages, and occasionally even people from town to town. Based in the shining capital city of Akatsuki, the Bees tirelessly work to deliver the mail... and with it, the 'hearts' of their loved ones... to all the citizens of Amberground.

Correct, it neglects to mention that Amberground is a truly awful place to live, perpetually shrouded in darkness except for a small artificial sun over the capital and infested by gigantic, Nigh-Invulnerable killer insects called Gaichuu. Gaichuu feed on the 'Hearts' of humans (not the literal organ, more like a sort of Life Energy), and since a person's letters contain fragments of their 'Heart', Gaichuu are naturally drawn to large concentrations of mail. As a result, the Letter Bees
Tegami Bachi, Vol. 9
To be elite; they have the single most dangerous job in the world. To aid them, they are equipped with special weapons that allow them to harness the power of their Heart to destroy Gaichuu, and travel with partners/bodyguards called 'Dingoes' that assist them in their work, but they still don't have a terrific life expectancy.
The main story follows the adventures of Lag Seeing, a rookie Letter Bee (and former Letter) as he seeks out Gauche Suede, the Bee who saved him after his mother disappeared... and who has since disappeared himself. With his Dingo, a somewhat...
Young lady given the name of Niche, Lag delivers letters, battles Gaichuu, hunts for the missing Gauche, and slowly but surely begins to find himself drawn into a hidden conflict that threatens to rip apart the already troubled land of Amberground.

Letter Bee Game Has Its Heart Set On March Release
The second season of the anime Overtook the Manga, leading to several events to play out a bit different while still telling the same story.
The manga is licensed to Viz Media and is available wherever manga is sold. The manga ran from September 2006 to November 2015 for 20 volumes, and the English translation is complete.In Amberground, a dangerous terrain where a man-made star casts a permanent twilight, young Lag Seeing aspires to become a Letter Bee: a postman entrusted to deliver the hearts of people separated from the ones they love.

Hiroyuki Asada (浅田弘幸 Asada Hiroyuki) is a Japanese mangaka. His most known series are I'll and Tegami Bachi. All of Asada's manga were serialized in the monthly shōnen anthology Monthly Shōnen Jump (which has since been discontinued; Tegami Bachi now appears in its replacement Jump Square). He made his debut in 1986. He acquired a fanbase with Mint: Sleeping Rabbit, Renka by degrees, and his popularity improved with I'll. He also worked on the character design of the 2019 anime adaptation of Tezuka's classic Dororo. In his personal life, he is part of a unit with Shou Tajima (best known for Psych) and Takeshi Obata (best known for Hikaru no Go and Death Note), and his creation activity with AQUARIOS 3.
All Letter Bee Gathered Here ✧
Well, hm. As usual, I read this tracking back from the anime adaptation, which has lately popped up on Crunchyroll. It's definitely aimed at the younger segment of the target audience, as one can tell by the 12-year-old protagonist and, early on, an action sequence taking place in the dangerous Broccoli Forest, obviously a place of terror for young readers/viewers. I recall I had seen a couple of episodes on disc from the library some years back, and bounced off it early on due to it seeming rather under my head, plus my then-increasing disinterest in mecha, but I had a lot of time to kill last week, and it was all right there, so. The anime tracks the first volume very well, as is common. I may end up reading all 20 volumes this winter to see if that holds for the ending, which these things commonly don't, as the anime creators struggle to wrap things up tidily in the requisite number of episodes (Season 3, in this case) whether the parent manga concludes or not. I suspect some major simplifications, although the anime did manage to hit all the beats, repeatedly till they stopped moving. Anyway, as the plot moves on from it initial awkward beginning -- the creators start training their audiences in pantie shots early, it appears from the underwear jokes -- it does develop a strong cast of interesting older characters, all of whom get their moments eventually. I'm giving this one more star than I would otherwise for the especially interesting character arc of the normally doomed mentor figure, letter bee Gauche Suede. I'm possibly reading more into it than intended, but he seems a pretty fair metaphor for how people change irrevocably with age and experience. I see by the side matter that the manga writer started publishing in 1986, the same year I did, so he wasn't a kid when he penned this in the early 00s. World-building even more gonzo than usual, making no sense but psychological, and one of the goofier weapon systems in a medium sporting a long line of goofy weapons, although its implications do get explored eventually, so points for that. Ta, L. Later: Finished the manga, all 99 chapters, and have decided I rec it. The beginning is uneven as to tone and possibly imagined target age; it takes it a ways in to decide that, yeah, this isn't going to be that silly a story after all, and by the time it gets to the end it's not silly in the least. Complicated, decidedly WTF in places (so what else is new) but still keeping a grip on something solid at the core. Anyone's guess how much of it the artist made up at what stage; I don't know if the operatic ending was in his mind yet back in the Broccoli Forest years before, though some of the backstory had to be. As I figured, the anime ending is much changed from the manga, probably in part because the manga wasn't finished yet at the time they put it together. I don't totally mind the compression and rearrangement, different media 'n all, but the end result here may as well be two different universes. Several of the side characters get very different roles, arcs and endings, none of which I liked as well as the more coherent manga versions. What is, in the manga, a mid-story crisis is in in the anime turned into a rather game-y big boss bug fight. It was a pretty good big boss bug fight, but not where the story was actually going. L.

What a charming and unique series! I love the concept: a world where there is only darkness and an artificial sun to combat it, where society is split by a rigorously enforced caste system, where sending a simple letter from one town to another is a death-defying mission that requires a strong heart to survive. Volume one opens with Letter Bee extraordinaire, Gauche Suede and his dingo (a necessary companion for each Letter Bee), picking up a letter in the form of a young boy who must be delivered to a relative far away. The boy, Lag Seeing, witnesses the bravery and tenacity of the legendary Letter Bee and is determined to become one himself. 5 years later, he sets off for the capital in the hopes of training to become a Letter Bee. First, however, he feels compelled to deliver a letter in the form of a young girl, to whom he obviously relates. Since the girl has insufficient postage, no one else will deliver her. Lag sets off with the strange young girl, who expresses a desire to become his dingo. Bits of commentary at the end hint at a rich and complex world, with the potential to turn into something far more intellectual than your average manga. Great series.
It was pretty much a sure bet that this series would be excellent, considering it was recommended to me (very strongly) by the same person who recommended Full Metal Alchemist. And actually, I'd heard about Tegami Bachi before - it has an excellent reputation. This is the kind of story that is so original and cool and fun that it leaves the reader with an urge to write something themselves, and the ideas are so engaging and filled with possibility that said reader must work hard not to be derivative when using all that creative energy. Or, to say it another way, it's totally fabulous.
All Letter Bee Gathered Here ✧ — Illustration Of The China Exhibition Comicup26
First off, THE
Well, hm. As usual, I read this tracking back from the anime adaptation, which has lately popped up on Crunchyroll. It's definitely aimed at the younger segment of the target audience, as one can tell by the 12-year-old protagonist and, early on, an action sequence taking place in the dangerous Broccoli Forest, obviously a place of terror for young readers/viewers. I recall I had seen a couple of episodes on disc from the library some years back, and bounced off it early on due to it seeming rather under my head, plus my then-increasing disinterest in mecha, but I had a lot of time to kill last week, and it was all right there, so. The anime tracks the first volume very well, as is common. I may end up reading all 20 volumes this winter to see if that holds for the ending, which these things commonly don't, as the anime creators struggle to wrap things up tidily in the requisite number of episodes (Season 3, in this case) whether the parent manga concludes or not. I suspect some major simplifications, although the anime did manage to hit all the beats, repeatedly till they stopped moving. Anyway, as the plot moves on from it initial awkward beginning -- the creators start training their audiences in pantie shots early, it appears from the underwear jokes -- it does develop a strong cast of interesting older characters, all of whom get their moments eventually. I'm giving this one more star than I would otherwise for the especially interesting character arc of the normally doomed mentor figure, letter bee Gauche Suede. I'm possibly reading more into it than intended, but he seems a pretty fair metaphor for how people change irrevocably with age and experience. I see by the side matter that the manga writer started publishing in 1986, the same year I did, so he wasn't a kid when he penned this in the early 00s. World-building even more gonzo than usual, making no sense but psychological, and one of the goofier weapon systems in a medium sporting a long line of goofy weapons, although its implications do get explored eventually, so points for that. Ta, L. Later: Finished the manga, all 99 chapters, and have decided I rec it. The beginning is uneven as to tone and possibly imagined target age; it takes it a ways in to decide that, yeah, this isn't going to be that silly a story after all, and by the time it gets to the end it's not silly in the least. Complicated, decidedly WTF in places (so what else is new) but still keeping a grip on something solid at the core. Anyone's guess how much of it the artist made up at what stage; I don't know if the operatic ending was in his mind yet back in the Broccoli Forest years before, though some of the backstory had to be. As I figured, the anime ending is much changed from the manga, probably in part because the manga wasn't finished yet at the time they put it together. I don't totally mind the compression and rearrangement, different media 'n all, but the end result here may as well be two different universes. Several of the side characters get very different roles, arcs and endings, none of which I liked as well as the more coherent manga versions. What is, in the manga, a mid-story crisis is in in the anime turned into a rather game-y big boss bug fight. It was a pretty good big boss bug fight, but not where the story was actually going. L.

What a charming and unique series! I love the concept: a world where there is only darkness and an artificial sun to combat it, where society is split by a rigorously enforced caste system, where sending a simple letter from one town to another is a death-defying mission that requires a strong heart to survive. Volume one opens with Letter Bee extraordinaire, Gauche Suede and his dingo (a necessary companion for each Letter Bee), picking up a letter in the form of a young boy who must be delivered to a relative far away. The boy, Lag Seeing, witnesses the bravery and tenacity of the legendary Letter Bee and is determined to become one himself. 5 years later, he sets off for the capital in the hopes of training to become a Letter Bee. First, however, he feels compelled to deliver a letter in the form of a young girl, to whom he obviously relates. Since the girl has insufficient postage, no one else will deliver her. Lag sets off with the strange young girl, who expresses a desire to become his dingo. Bits of commentary at the end hint at a rich and complex world, with the potential to turn into something far more intellectual than your average manga. Great series.
It was pretty much a sure bet that this series would be excellent, considering it was recommended to me (very strongly) by the same person who recommended Full Metal Alchemist. And actually, I'd heard about Tegami Bachi before - it has an excellent reputation. This is the kind of story that is so original and cool and fun that it leaves the reader with an urge to write something themselves, and the ideas are so engaging and filled with possibility that said reader must work hard not to be derivative when using all that creative energy. Or, to say it another way, it's totally fabulous.
All Letter Bee Gathered Here ✧ — Illustration Of The China Exhibition Comicup26
First off, THE
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