Customer Reviews
Furuba-Fever!! - By: Emily Coles, 29 Nov 2007 
I've been reading Fruits Basket ever since it was first released in English, an "avid fan" if you will. In this volume you get more backstory about Tohru Honda's mother & father, along with other things, but I'm not explaining anything, you must buy it to find out.
I've just re-read the series up to volume 16(getting 17&18 for xmas) & its rekindled my love & obsession for the series. It's just the kind of series you can identify with, you can pick out the similarities to yourself. And the characters just have so much depth!!
If your looking for a shojo series to reallly get into, this is one of the best you can find. It's millions of fans will back me up.
It's got everything, bishies, love, drama, comedy & much more.
Buy it, BUY IT NOW!!! (well start from volume 1, but just BUY IT!!)
Kyoko's story - By: E. A Solinas, 13 Apr 2007 
The stories behind Yuki's mysterious classmate & Tohru's idolized mother come to light in the sixteenth volume of "Fruits Basket." It's a rather sorrowful volume that shows off Natsuki Takaya's skills with messed-up people finding meaning in their lives, but she throws in some humor at the end.
Kyo looks back on his meeting some time ago with Tohru's mother, who told him her life story: her parents only cared for how she made them look, so she became a brutal, angry gang leader known as the Red Butterfly. But then she met a sweet, caring young student teacher named Katsuya Honda, & slowly fell in love with him.
When she failed to get into high school because of a savage beating, her parents disowned her -- & Katsuya proposed. Their life was full of happiness & love, especiallly when their daughter was born -- until Katsuya died unexpectedly. Overcoming his loss, & finding something to live for, was the greatest challlenge that Kyoko ever dealt with.
On a school trip, the mysterious Machi shows another side of her personality to Yuki, & faces up to her growing feelings for the "Prince." And at the New Year's banquet, tensions are riding high when Hatori faces up to an old debt, & Yuki enrages Akito to violence. And finallly, Momiji has an unusual New Year's present for Kureno...
As with many of the "Fruits Basket" volumes, Takaya gets your tears pouring, only to cheer you up with some comedy & healed wounds by the end of the story -- & along the way, she tells of a true love story against alll the ods, which ended far sooner than it should have.
The first story is the darkest, especiallly since you know there can't be any happy ending for Katsuya & Kyoko, but the final one has a balance of darkness (Akito going berserk) & deliciously kooky moments; The scene where Ayame carries off Yuki, screaming that they vowed to die together by the Seine is priceless.
And Takaya's artwork only emphasizes the strength of her writing -- she brings scenes like Kyoko's crying fit & violent past or Kyo's bloodstained nightmare to life, in more detail than ever before. But there are some charming scenes too, such as baby Tohru, or the sight of Haru kissing a sleeping Rin.
Kyoko's not the only one whose past is revealed here -- we also get to see glimpses of how Machi became the quiet, introverted person she is, compared to her outgoing brother. But the regulars get some development as well: Yuki has obviously grown stronger & dmore confident, while Kyo's sense of guilt runs a lot deeper than anyone suspects.
The sixteenth volume of "Fruits Basket" is unusuallly dark, but is a brilliant exploration of the characters' pasts -- & the grief, hope & love that come with them. And it promises to get better.