Alice in Murderland (Japanese: 架刑のアリス, Hepburn: Kakei no Arisu) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Kaori Yuki. It was published in Kodansha's shōjo manga magazineAria from January 2014 to April 2018, and later, after Aria ceased publication, serialized in Shōnen Magazine Edge from July to September 2018. Kodansha collected its chapters in eleven tankōbon volumes.
Plot
The series centers on Stella Kuonji, one of nine adopted siblings in the wealthy and influential Kuonji family. At one of the family's monthly tea parties, their parents announce that the children must now fight to the death within the next year, with the sole survivor being chosen as the family's heir. In the ensuing chaos, Stella's violent alternative personality, Bloody Alice, begins to resurface in Stella's clashes with the other children.
As the series progresses, Stella learns that her adopted family are actually bandersnatches, creatures that feed on human souls, and that they require the tea at the monthly tea parties to survive. Her adopted mother, Olga, was the sole survivor of one of the Kuonji family's rituals of bloodshed among its children. As a result of winning, Olga was allowed to bring back her partner. Furthermore, Stella begins to suspect that the accident that killed her parents was a plot by the Kuonji family. Although Stella and her beloved elder brother Zeno wish to end the family tradition of ritualistic bloodshed, Olga denies that possibility.
Release
Written and illustrated by Kaori Yuki, Alice in Murderland started it serialization in Kodansha's shōjo manga magazine Aria on 28 January 2014.[3][4][5] After Aria ceased publication on 28 April 2018,[6] the series was transferred to Shonen Magazine Edge, starting publication on 17 July of the same year.[7] The series finished on 15 September 2018.[8] Kodansha collected its chapters in eleven tankōbon volumes, released from 6 June 2014 to 5 October 2018.[9][10]
Reviewing the first volume for Anime News Network, Rebecca Silverman gave it a grade of B. She commented that the series "doesn't always work, but it has enough potential to that given another volume or two, I feel like it will really take off." She praised the art, and wrote that Stella's mother "is definitely a leading contender for 'sickest parent in manga.'", saying that the scenes with the parents were "a combination of enraging and chilling, making them easily the most effective part of the volume."[2]