Hakushaku to Yousei
Earl and Fairy
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Hakushaku to Yousei

Alternative Titles

Synonyms: Count and Fairy, Hakushaku to Yosei, My Fairy, The Count and The Fairy
Japanese: 伯爵と妖精
English: Earl and Fairy
More titles

Information

Volumes: 33
Chapters: Unknown
Status: Finished
Published: Mar 3, 2004 to Dec 27, 2013
Genres: Adventure Adventure, Fantasy Fantasy
Demographic: Shoujo Shoujo
Serialization: None
Authors: Takaboshi, Asako (Art), Tani, Mizue (Story)

Statistics

Score: 7.691 (scored by 743743 users)
1 indicates a weighted score.
Ranked: #18572
2 based on the top manga page. Please note that 'R18+' titles are excluded.
Popularity: #5532
Members: 3,601
Favorites: 43

Resources

Recommendations

Basically the SAME exact thing. Except in one the main character sees vampires and in the other the main character sees fairies. They both have Earls who fell madly in love with the main character, plus in both manga, he gets insanely jealous when she calls the butler by his real name before she calls him by HIS real name. Also, I found this really funny... Both Earls have blonde hair and seem to be "Womanizers" (If I spelled that correctly) and BOTH main characters have long auburn(?) hair, came from 'working class' and practically forced to come with the Earl. If you  read more 
reportRecommended by PoisonSunflower
Hakushaku to Yousei also features an innocent red-haired green eyed heroine. Both have special powers. Both come from a small villaige and get caught up in the life of a suave, fair haired, devious hero. Similar shoujo-fantasy formula, though the heroine in Yousei is more sweet-tempered. 
reportRecommended by evilteddybear101
Male love interests are nobility, ladies men, and have a bit of a dark side who are very loyal/dedicated to the female lead. Stories contain themes of revenge, mystery, and travel. 
reportRecommended by buunny
I know they don't really look alike, but in a way... they do. Both male characters are "perfect" (though the main girl later found out it's not like this in reality). Despite the female main characters described as not pleasant, they say the male is much worse. In both, you don't really see involved parents, despite the girls being underage (Kyoko is 16 in the begnning, while Lydia is 17. Though Lydia is in the age of marriage, so...) and the guy's parents also not an active part of the plot in the present (for different reasons) Both women are naive, and in both the romance take  read more 
reportRecommended by EfiChan