Tetsuko no Tabi is a non-fiction series. It is inspired on the book Getting On and Off of JR’s 4600 Stations by Hirohiko Yokomi [ja], published in 1998, which chronicles his experience visiting all of Japan rail's train stations.[1][2] The editor in chief of Shogakukan's Monthly Ikki, Hideki Egami [ja], wanted to recapture Yokomi's experience in manga. Masahiko Ishikawa, Shogakukan's editor and a railfan, recruited Naoe Kikuchi, a new manga artist who worked with Shogakukan on a number of shorts, and this would be her first serialized work.[3][2]Tetsuko no Tabi is about Kikuchi herself, traveling with Yokomi and Ishikawa, illustrating a manga based on their experiences.[2]
The travel-writer, who turns out to be a huge train-fan. He has a lot of energy and passion for trains, and sometimes girls, but also micro-manages all their trips, planning every detail down to the second. He cares mostly about following the schedule and successfully achieving his planned goals (e.g. visiting all stations on a line in a completely bizarre order to accommodate infrequent trains).
A manga artist. She has no interest in trains whatsoever, and she keeps getting freaked out by Yokomi's antics. She is also cynical, sarcastic, and rather lazy, mainly looking forward to the next ekiben.
Created by Hirohiko Yokomi [ja] and Naoe Kikuchi [ja], Tetsuko no Tabi debuted in Shogakukan's Spirits Zōkan Ikki[a] on November 30, 2001.[4] The series finished on October 25, 2006.[b] Shogakukan collected its chapters in six tankōbon volumes, released from November 30, 2004, to February 28, 2007.[7] The series was again intermittently serialized from 2007,[8] with chapters collected in a single volume, titled Tetsuko no Tabi Plus, released on February 25, 2009.[9]
A sequel, titled Shin Tetsuko no Tabi (新・鉄子の旅), illustrated by Kanoko Hoashi, was serialized in Monthly Ikki from May 25, 2009,[10][11] to January 25, 2013.[12] Shogakukan collected its chapters in five tankōbon volumes, released from February 25, 2010,[13] to March 29, 2013.[14]
Another manga series, titled Tetsuko no Tabi 3-daime (鉄子の旅 3代目), illustrated by Akira Kirioka, was serialized in Monthly Sunday Gene-X from May 19, 2016,[15] to January 19, 2019.[16] Shogakukan collected its chapters in four volumes, released from February 17, 2017,[17] to July 19, 2019.[18]
^Yokomi, Hirohiko (May 25, 2009). 新企画スタート. Hirohiko Yokomi's recent report! (in Japanese). Archived from the original on October 23, 2021. Retrieved October 23, 2021.