Where to Start with Naoko Takeuchi
Naoko Takeuchi proved that stories about girls transforming and fighting evil could carry the same mythic weight as any battle manga. A trained pharmacist with a love of astronomy and haute couture, she fused Art Nouveau elegance with cosmic stakes and rewrote the rules of shojo in the process, inspiring a generation of manga creators worldwide.
Start here
Sailor Moon
Naoko Takeuchi · 2500 pages · 1991 · Easy
Themes: love, friendship, female empowerment, destiny
The only place to start. Sailor Moon follows Usagi Tsukino, a clumsy, crybaby teenager who discovers she’s the reincarnation of a lunar warrior destined to protect Earth. Alongside her fellow Sailor Guardians, she fights increasingly powerful enemies while navigating school, romance, and the weight of her cosmic destiny.
Why Start Here
Sailor Moon is Takeuchi’s masterwork and one of the most influential manga ever created. It essentially invented the “magical girl team” genre as we know it, proving that stories about girls fighting evil could be just as epic, dramatic, and complex as any shonen battle manga.
What makes the manga special (as opposed to the anime adaptation most people know) is Takeuchi’s art. Her style is ethereal and fashion-forward, dripping with Art Nouveau influences. The manga is also darker and more streamlined than the anime, with higher stakes and faster pacing. Characters die. Sacrifices are real. The love story between Usagi and Mamoru carries genuine mythic weight.
What to Expect
A series that starts deceptively simple and grows progressively grander in scope. Early chapters are monster-of-the-week adventures, but by the middle arcs, you’re dealing with time travel, galactic warfare, and questions about fate versus free will. Takeuchi’s art evolves dramatically across the 12 volumes, becoming more elaborate and confident.
Read it for the art, the characters, and the feeling that love really can save the universe.