What Happens In The Detective Is Already Dead Manga, Vol. 1?

2026-01-01 02:15:23 113

4 Answers

Xavier
Xavier
2026-01-03 19:06:20
Imagine a detective story where the genius sleuth is a silver-haired girl who drinks milk straight from the carton, and her sidekick is a perpetually exhausted teen. That’s Vol. 1 in a nutshell. The plane sequence is pure chaos—Siesta deduces everything from a passenger’s shoelaces to the terrorist’s identity, while Kimizuka just wants to sleep. Later, her death hangs over the story like a shadow, making the present-day scenes with Nagisa eerie. The manga expands on the light novel’s details, especially Siesta’s playful yet lonely personality. There’s a surreal moment where Kimizuka hallucinates her ghost during a case, and it wrecked me. The volume ends with Nagisa proposing a new partnership, leaving you screaming, 'What’s her connection to Siesta?!'
Isaac
Isaac
2026-01-06 02:42:46
Volume 1 is like stepping into a noir film with a teenage twist. Kimizuka’s life gets turned upside down when Siesta, this enigmatic detective, picks him as her assistant mid-flight. Fast-forward, and she’s gone, leaving him with trauma and a void—until a new girl, Nagisa, appears looking exactly like Siesta. Cue existential dread and unresolved tension! The manga does a great job teasing the overarching mystery (what is the 'Heartbeat Replica' project?) while keeping the banter light. The action scenes are crisp, and Siesta’s Sherlock-level deductions shine. What hooked me was the contrast between Kimizuka’s dry narration and the flashbacks’ vibrancy—it hurts knowing how things end for them.
Ryder
Ryder
2026-01-07 08:34:29
Siesta’s introduction is unforgettable—she’s quirky, brilliant, and tragically doomed. The volume bounces between her dynamic with Kimizuka (their chemistry is half banter, half emotional gut-punches) and his current life, where he’s haunted by her absence. Nagisa’s arrival adds layers: Is she a clone? A relative? The art’s soft lines make even the action feel bittersweet. That scene where Kimizuka breaks down crying after solving a case alone? Oof. It’s a solid setup for a mystery that’s as much about loss as it is about sleuthing.
Imogen
Imogen
2026-01-07 09:12:58
The first volume of 'The Detective Is Already Dead' throws you straight into a whirlwind of mystery and melancholy. Our protagonist, Kimihiko Kimizuka, recounts his bizarre past as the assistant to Siesta, a brilliant detective who's—well, already dead. The story flips between their first meeting on a plane (where they thwart a terrorist plot) and the present, where Kimizuka is just a high schooler trying to move on. But fate has other plans when a girl identical to Siesta shows up, dragging him back into detective work. The art captures Siesta's ethereal charm perfectly, and the dialogue balances wit with emotional punches. I love how the manga layers its reveals—what seems like a simple case on the plane ties into a bigger conspiracy. It’s got that classic 'unwilling hero' vibe but with a twist of grief lingering beneath the surface.
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