Marginal
- Volume 05Chapter 19-23
- Ch 23 Epilogue: Holy Night Apr 18, 2015 Ch 22 Border's End Mar 30, 2015 Ch 21 Flood Mar 23, 2015 Ch 20 Hint Feb 3, 2015 Ch 19 Hallelujah Apr 18, 2015
- Volume 04Chapter 14-18
- Ch 18 The Last Supper Apr 18, 2015 Ch 17 Ashijin and the Marg... Apr 18, 2015 Ch 16 Trophy Apr 18, 2015 Ch 15 Hunter Apr 18, 2015 Ch 14 Star and Flame Apr 18, 2015
- Volume 03Chapter 10-13
- Ch 13 Apr 18, 2015 Ch 12 Read Online Feb 25, 2012 Ch 11 Read Online Feb 13, 2011 Ch 10 Read Online Jan 30, 2011
- Volume 02Chapter 5-9
- Volume 01Chapter 1-4
- Volume 00Chapter 1.1-1.3
From The Pink Panzer:
In the year 2999, only eleven cities still survive on Earth. The climate has changed drastically, and a biochemical apocalypse has made women extinct. For centuries, the male population of Earth has survived by depending on only one woman, called the Holy Mother, whose ova are harvested to create genetically engineered children. By now, any concept of a world in which women exist as ordinary people is long gone. Society has re-structured itself around all-male families, and gay relationships have become the norm.
At the beginning of Marginal, the Holy Mother is assassinated by a terrorist known as Grinja. The government in power doesn't want to start a mass panic, so it pretends that the Holy Mother has only shed her vessel, and that she will be miraculously "reborn" in the near future. The public, which is superstitious and devout, believes this easily. Only government officials know that behind the scenes, there is a frantic effort to create a new being with an XXY chromosome -- a male capable of giving birth. (This is a BL misrepresentation of an actual phenomenon known as Klinefelter's Syndrome.)
The manga's story revolves around one such boy -- Kira, the product of a genetic experiment, who becomes involved in a three-way relationship with Grinja, the aforementioned terrorist, and Ashijin, a young man who calls himself Kira's owner. A complex plot and flawless world-building make the story irresistible, and Kira's search for freedom is as symbolic as it is gripping.