Listen to Me, Girls. I Am Your Father!

Summary

Listen to Me, Girls. I Am Your Father! (Japanese: パパのいうことを聞きなさい!, Hepburn: Papa no Iukoto wo Kikinasai!, lit. "Listen to What Papa Says!") is a Japanese light novel series written by Tomohiro Matsu and illustrated by Yuka Nakajima. It was published by Shueisha's Super Dash Bunko imprint, with 18 volumes released from December 2009 to March 2015. Following Matsu's death in May 2016, a posthumous volume, subtitled After 1, was released in July of that same year.

Listen to Me, Girls. I Am Your Father!
First light novel cover, featuring (from left to right) Sora, Miu, and Hina
パパのいうことを聞きなさい!
(Papa no Iu Koto o Kikinasai!)
GenreRomantic comedy[1]
Light novel
Written byTomohiro Matsu
Illustrated byYuka Nakajima
Published byShueisha
ImprintSuper Dash Bunko
DemographicMale
Original runDecember 25, 2009March 25, 2015
Volumes18 + 1
Further information
Manga
Written byTomohiro Matsu
Illustrated byYohei Takemura
Published byShueisha
Magazine
DemographicShōnen
Original runAugust 4, 2011October 19, 2012
Volumes3
Manga
Papa no Iukoto o Kikinasai: Takanashi no Hidamari
Written by
Published byShueisha
MagazineUltra Jump
DemographicSeinen
Original runAugust 19, 2011January 19, 2012
Volumes1
Manga
Papa no Iukoto o Kikinasai: Miu-sama no Iu Tōri!
Written byTomoo Katou
Published byShueisha
MagazineCookie
DemographicJosei
Original runAugust 26, 2011February 25, 2012
Volumes1
Manga
Papa no Iukoto o Kikinasai: Usagi no Mark
Written byMatsuda98
Published byShueisha
MagazineCobalt
DemographicShōjo
Original runOctober 1, 2011February 1, 2012
Volumes1
Manga
Papa no Iukoto o Kikinasai: Sora-iro no Hibiki
Written byTatsuma Ejiri
Published byShueisha
MagazineSuper Dash & Go
DemographicShōnen
Original runOctober 25, 2011December 25, 2012
Volumes2
Manga
Papa no Iukoto o Kikinasai: Rojō Kansatsu Kenkyū Nisshi
Written byMiyano Hirotsugu
Published byShueisha
MagazineWeekly Young Jump
DemographicSeinen
Original runOctober 27, 2011October 11, 2012
Volumes4
Anime television series
Directed byItsuro Kawasaki
Produced by
  • Shinya Shinozaki
  • Takahiro Yamanaka
  • Tomoko Kawasaki
Written byNaruhisa Arakawa
Music byHiroshi Uesugi
StudioFeel
Licensed by
Original networkTokyo MX, tvk, TVS, Chiba TV, MBS, TVA, BS11
English network
Original run January 11, 2012 March 27, 2012
Episodes12 + 3 OVAs (List of episodes)
Game
Game Demo Papa no Iu Koto wo Kikinasai!
DeveloperTenky, Banpresto
PublisherBandai Namco Entertainment
GenreVisual novel
PlatformPlayStation Portable
ReleasedApril 26, 2012

A manga adaptation, illustrated by Yohei Takemura, was serialized in Shueisha's shōnen manga magazines Jump Square (August 2011–March 2012) and Jump SQ.19 (April–October 2012), with its chapters collected in three tankōbon volumes. Five spin-off manga were also released in 2011. A 12-episode anime television series adaptation by Feel was broadcast from January to March 2012, with three additional original video animation (OVA) episodes released. A video game by Bandai Namco Entertainment was released for the PlayStation Portable in April 2012.

Plot edit

Yuuta Segawa is in his freshman year of college. He and his older sister Yuri were orphaned as children but when their relatives tried to separate and send them to live in different foster homes, Yuri chose to raise him on her own. Now, many years later, Yuri, who has since married, asks Yuuta to babysit her daughter, Hina, and two step-daughters, Sora and Miu Takanashi, while she and her husband go on a trip. Unfortunately, the plane Yuri and her husband are on crashes and they are both reported missing and presumed dead. A similar event unfolds, and in order to prevent the girls being separated from each other, Yuuta takes it upon himself to look after the girls in his small apartment, thus begins Yuuta's story of sharing his everyday life with his three nieces.

Characters edit

Main characters edit

Yuuta Segawa (瀬川 祐太, Segawa Yūta)[2]
Voiced by: Wataru Hatano
The main character, a college first-year student just starting a new life in the School of Literature at Tama University. His parents died when he and his sister were young and to prevent them from being separated, his sister, Yuri, decided to raise him herself. Years later, when Yuri and her husband go missing, Yuuta makes the decision to become the guardian of their three daughters so that they are not separated, as some of the Takanashi relatives plan to do. His reliable and kind nature soon wins him the respect and affection of the three sisters, especially Sora, who has had a crush on him since their first meeting. He has feelings for Raika, a second-year university student and fellow club member, but cannot seem to find the right time or way to express his feelings to her. After two months and several adventures with the girls, the Takanashi family come to accept him as a capable guardian for the sisters. They increase their financial support and give Yuuta shared title to his sister's big house in Ikebukuro allowing him and the girls to move out of his six-mat room apartment. Four years after his sister and brother-in-law go missing, Yuuta and Sora decide to marry.
Sora Takanashi (小鳥遊 空, Takanashi Sora)
Voiced by: Sumire Uesaka
The eldest of the three half-sisters. She is 14 years old, a second-year middle school student, and has a tsundere personality. Notable for a strand of her neck length brown hair that curves forward and curls like a crescent. She has fairly good grades in school but is not adept at cooking. She has had a crush on Yuuta since they first met but starts out calling him "oji-san." When they become more comfortable with each other she starts referring to him as "onii-chan" even though they are not, strictly speaking, related. Since her first-year in junior high, Sora registers for the choir club to express her desire to sing. Yuuta is (perhaps purposefully) oblivious to her feelings. Sora does not like it when Yuuta pays attention to Raika as she is envious of both Raika's well-developed body and also her close relationship with Yuuta. Due to heavy responsibilities, Sora thought of resigning from her club, but with motivation from Kiyomi Okae the president, and Yuuta, Sora stays true to herself. In Volume 17, Sora begins her first-year in high school and earns top position of the choir club. She marries Yuuta during the events of volume 18.
Miu Takanashi (小鳥遊 美羽, Takanashi Miu)
Voiced by: Eri Kitamura
The second eldest of the three half-sisters. She is a 10-year-old fifth grader. She has blonde hair as her biological mother is part of Russian lineage. She normally refers to Yuuta as Oji-san. She has a preference for guys who are older than her and manly. It is implied that she may have a slight crush on Yuuta, as she is particularly curious about his love life. She went on a date with Kouichi once. In the light novels, Miu started developing feelings for Yuuta at the end of volume 4. Sasha also makes an appearance in volume 4 planning to rightfully take Miu back, but Miu decides to stay with Yuuta and her half-sisters. In Volume 17, she begins her first-year in junior high school and becomes a singing idol.
Hina Takanashi (小鳥遊 ひな, Takanashi Hina)
Voiced by: Hiromi Igarashi
The youngest of the three half-sisters. She is three years old and attends daycare. She is the biological daughter of Yuri and thus the only one of the three girls who is directly related to Yuuta. She is very friendly and unafraid of strangers. She sometimes mispronounces words, often leaving out certain consonants. She normally addresses Yuuta as Oji-san but has trouble with the "j" and "s" sounds so it comes out as Oi-tan (little uncle). She is a fan of the heroine anime, Luna Luna Seven. Whenever Hina mentions her parents' names, Yuuta and the elder sisters did their best to keep her cheerful till she emotionally accepts they're in heaven. In the OVA, she began her second-grade in elementary school and speaks clearly.

Street Observation Research Society edit

Raika Oda (織田 莱香, Oda Raika)
Voiced by: Yui Horie
A second-year student at Tama University School of Literature. She is the only female member in the Street Observation Research Society. Every time Sako has perverted thoughts or is crude, she beats him with a giant paper fan. Despite being very attractive, she does not reveal her emotions easily and dislikes talking with anyone except for Yuuta. Raika is a very good cook, particularly in Japanese cuisine and likes to tease Yuuta. She especially loves cute things, and upon encountering them her personality changes. This also applies to Yuuta's nieces including Sora, who does not like Raika because she is jealous of Raika's relationship with Yuuta; ironically see her a maternal figure.
Kouichi Nimura (仁村 浩一, Nimura Kōichi)
Voiced by: Daisuke Ono
A first-year student of Tama University School of Literature. He is a good friend of Yuuta's and a womanizer. He insists that his house is only for entertaining girls. As a result, he almost never stays at his home and instead spends time at Yuuta's apartment, or at one of his affairs' places. He is however a very caring friend and will help out with chores on his own initiative. He also helps Yuuta keep Sako away from his nieces and has a soft spot for Miu.
Shuntarou Sako (佐古 俊太郎, Sako Shuntarō)
Voiced by: Junji Majima
A third-year student of the Tama University School of Literature. He is the President of the Street Observation Research Society. Sako has been a third-year in the university ever since Raika enrolled. He is a lolicon and wears thick glasses. He once told Raika that "Love is justice. Love is the strongest." to justify his lolicon fetishes to which Raika later agrees. Despite this she frequently beats him on with a paper fan when he goes overboard. He has taken a certain interest in Yuuta's nieces, excluding Sora, whom he claims she is too old for him despite being only 14, and usually calls her "Oba-chan" (old lady). Sako actually proves himself to be a reliable friend.

Others edit

Yuri Takanashi (小鳥遊 祐理, Takanashi Yuri)
Voiced by: Sayaka Ohara
Yuuta's older sister, Miu's and Sora's stepmother, and Hina's mother. When their parents died, she decided to raise Yuuta by herself so that they would not be separated. She passed down the Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star song to her family. She married Shingo while Yuuta was in high school. When Yuuta found out that her husband-to-be had been previously married and already had two kids, Miu and Sora, he became extremely frustrated. After cooling down, he realized that he was in no position to deny his sister's happiness. On the way back to apologize for his temper, he saw Sora and tended her scraped palm - the origin of her crush on him. When the flight that Yuri and Shingo were on goes missing, Yuuta chooses to take her kids into his custody to prevent them from being separated. Her spirit, alongside her husband appeared in the OVA, while secretly cheering for Sora and Yuuta.
Shingo Takanashi (小鳥遊 進悟, Takanashi Shingo)
Voiced by: Nobuo Tobita
Yuri's husband. He hails from a wealthy family and is a genuinely kind man. He was previously married twice and each time had one child. Sora's mother died and Miu's mother divorced him. He and Yuri met at an otaku convention: she was cosplaying (a habit she hid from Yuuta) and he was a photographer. Shingo kept a collection of photographs of Yuri and the girls cosplaying. He appeared with Yuri in the OVA.
Kurumi Atarashi (新子 胡桃, Atarashi Kurumi)
Voiced by: Sakura Nakamura
Yuuta's next-door neighbor. She works as a voice actress and previously worked as a villain on Hina's favorite anime series. She plays with Hina and Miu during her spare time.
Sawako Midorikawa (緑川 佐和子, Midorikawa Sawako)
Voiced by: Rina Satō
Yuuta's rather inflexible landlady. She would have evicted Yuuta and the girls from their apartment, had it not been for the timely intervention of her mother, the real landlady. At 29-years-old, she is still single and seems to be jealous of young couples. Like many adults in the story, she develops a soft spot for Hina. She only appears in the anime adaption and the Takanashi no Hidamari manga; in the light novel Yuuta's landlord is an unnamed male with a minor role.
Shiori Kitahara (北原 栞, Kitahara Shiori)
Voiced by: Yuka Iguchi
Miu's friend and next-door neighbor of the Takanashi's Ikebukuro household. In the manga, she is protective of the sisters and is initially cold towards Yuuta, feeling he is not a worthy guardian. However, after seeing how reliable he actually is, she starts to develop feelings for him.
Yoshiko Sahara (佐原 よし子 (さはら よしこ))
Voiced by: Kyoko Hikami
Yuuta's paternal aunt. She initially allowed him to care for the Takanashi sisters as a pain reliever for the loss of Shingo and Yuri till they found a proper adult to raise all three, and does not see Yuuta as worthy guardian for his nieces. Deep down Yoshiko regretted not having courage to raise little Yuuta. She and Nobuyoshi at least get to witness her nephew improve as a young man and a father-figure, and has come to accept the siblings' closeness to each other.
Nobuyoshi Takanashi (小鳥遊 信好)
Voiced by: Bin Shimada
Shingo's paternal uncle. Unlike Yoshiko, Nobuyoshi is a much more competitor relative of the family; he carries Shingo's past relationships as his own failures. Nobuyoshi does not accept Yuuta as a legitimate guardian for the girls in any regard, but as of now he is okay with just short agreements. In Takanashi no Hidamari manga, Yoshiko persuades Nobuyoshi to see Yuuta and the elder sisters showing parental attendance at Hina's preschool, sensing the silhouettes of Yuri and Shingo, Nobuyoshi redeems and offers Yuuta the deed to the Takanashi's Ikebukuro house.
Sasha Irinichina Gagarina (サーシャ・イリイーニチナ・ガガーリナ)
Voiced by: Akemi Okamura
Shingo's ex-wife and Miu's biological mother. She had a brief happiness with Shingo until their relationship became sour due to family crisis, and left Miu in Shingo's care and moved to Russia. Her career is well known to be a fashion designer. After Shingo and Yuri's disappearance, the relatives refuse to send Miu to live with Sasha, as she cannot speak the language. Sasha only appears in the OVA and seems to have reconciled with Miu. Sasha helps customize a formal wear for Yuuta and Sora's wedding.

Media edit

Light novels edit

Written by Tomohiro Matsu, with illustrations by Yuka Nakajima, the first Me, Girls. I Am Your Father! novel was released on December 25, 2009.[3] The series finished with its eighteenth volume, released on March 25, 2015.[4] In May 2016, it was announced that Matsu had died;[5] on the same month, it was announced that a posthumous spin-off novel would be published.[6] Subtitled After 1, it was released on July 22, 2016.[7]

Volumes edit

No. Release date ISBN
1 December 25, 2009[3]978-4-08-630526-6
2 February 25, 2010[8]978-4-08-630533-4
3 May 25, 2010[9]978-4-08-630547-1
4 September 25, 2010[10]978-4-08-630569-3
5 November 25, 2010[11]978-4-08-630582-2
6 January 25, 2011[12]978-4-08-630588-4
7 May 25, 2011[13]978-4-08-630611-9
8 September 22, 2011[14]978-4-08-630635-5
9 January 25, 2012[15]978-4-08-630658-4
10 May 25, 2012[16]978-4-08-630678-2
11 October 25, 2012[17]978-4-08-630704-8
12 February 22, 2013[18]978-4-08-630719-2
13 June 25, 2013[19]978-4-08-630733-8
14 October 25, 2013[20]978-4-08-630756-7
15 February 25, 2014[21]978-4-08-630771-0
16 June 25, 2014[22]978-4-08-630787-1
17 January 23, 2015[23]978-4-08-630805-2
18 March 25, 2015[4]978-4-08-630807-6
After 1 July 22, 2016[7]978-4-08-630808-3

Manga edit

A manga adaptation, illustrated by Yohei Takemura, was serialized in Shueisha's shōnen manga magazine Jump Square from August 4, 2011,[24] to March 4, 2012.[25] It later moved to Jump SQ.19, where it ran from April 19 to October 19, 2012.[a] Shueisha collected its chapters in three tankōbon volumes, released from December 2, 2011,[29] to December 4, 2012.[30]

Five spin-off manga were published as well in different Shueisha manga magazines:

  • Takanashi no Hidamari (小鳥遊の陽だまり, "The Sunshine of the Takanashi Family") by Izumi Kirihara, F4U, Ryu Shinonome, Wadapen, and Keiji Watarai
Serialized in Ultra Jump from August 19, 2011,[31] to January 19, 2012.[32] Its chapters were collected in a single tankōbon volume, released on February 17, 2012.[33] It focuses on the people who encounter the Takanashi family.
  • Miu-sama no Iu Tōri! (美羽様のいう通り!, "Miu-sama is Always Right!") by Tomo Katō
Serialized in Cookie from August 26, 2011,[34] to February 25, 2012.[35] Its chapters were collected in a single tankōbon volume, released on March 23, 2012.[36] It focuses on Miu.
  • Usagi no Mark (うさぎのまぁく, Usagi no Māku, "Mark of the Rabbit") by Matsuda98
Serialized in Cobalt from October 1, 2011,[37] to February 1, 2012.[38] Its chapters were collected in a single tankōbon volume, released on March 23, 2012.[36] It focuses on Hina.
  • Sorairo no Hibiki (空色の響き, "Sora Colored Echo") by Tatsuma Ejiri
Serialized in Super Dash & Go from October 25, 2011,[39] to December 25, 2012.[40] Its chapters were collected in a single tankōbon volume, released on February 19, 2013.[41] It focuses on Sora.
  • Rojō Kansatsu Kenkyū Nisshi (路上観察研究日誌, "Chronicles of Street Observation Research") by Hirotsugu Miyano
Serialized in Weekly Young Jump from October 27, 2011,[42] to October 11, 2012.[43] Its chapters were collected in four tankōbon, released from January 19, 2012,[44] to January 19, 2015.[45] It focuses on the Street Observation Research Society.

Anime edit

A 12-episode anime television series adaptation by Feel was broadcast on Tokyo MX, tvk, TVS, Chiba TV, MBS, TVA, and BS11 from January 11 to March 27, 2012.[46][47] The opening theme is "Happy Girl" by Eri Kitamura, and the ending theme is "Coloring" by Yui Horie.[47] A 13th episode was bundled with the series' regular and limited editions of fifth Blu-ray Disc, released on July 11, 2013.[48] Another additional episode was bundled with the limited edition on the light novel's 13th volume, released on June 25, 2013.[49] A third additional episode was bundled with the limited edition of the light novel's 18th and last volume, released on March 25, 2015.[50]

The series was streamed by Crunchyroll.[51] Sentai Filmworks licensed the series for home video release in North America,[52] and released it on February 25, 2013.[53]

Visual novel edit

A visual novel video game was developed by Tenky and Banpresto and published by Namco Bandai Games was released for PlayStation Portable on April 26, 2012.[54][55]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Published from the first to fourth issues of the magazine,[26] released on April 19 and October 19, 2012, respectively.[27][28]

References edit

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  4. ^ a b パパのいうことを聞きなさい! 18 (in Japanese). Shueisha. Archived from the original on December 7, 2022. Retrieved August 22, 2023.
  5. ^ Pineda, Rafael (May 3, 2016). "'Mayoi Neko Overrun,' 'Listen to Me, Girls. I Am Your Father!' Novelist Tomohiro Matsu Passes Away at 43". Anime News Network. Archived from the original on October 14, 2022. Retrieved August 22, 2023.
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  7. ^ a b パパのいうことを聞きなさい! after 1 (in Japanese). Shueisha. Archived from the original on December 7, 2022. Retrieved August 22, 2023.
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External links edit

  • Official light novel website (in Japanese)
  • Official manga website (in Japanese)
  • Official videogame website (in Japanese)
  • Official anime website (in Japanese)
  • Listen to Me, Girls. I Am Your Father! (light novel) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia