Rainbow Nisha Rokubou No Shichinin Chapter 1 [new]
The first chapter of Rainbow acts as both a violent slap to the face of the reader and a tender handshake. It sets the stage for a story that deals with systemic corruption, trauma, and the unbreakable bonds of brotherhood. Before we get into the specifics of the opening pages, it is essential to understand the soil from which this story grows: the desperate, American-occupied Japan of the 1950s.
The "Rainbow" of the title refers to the light that appears after a storm. Chapter 1 is the storm—heavy, violent, and relentless—but it promises a story worth enduring for the beauty that follows. rainbow nisha rokubou no shichinin chapter 1
The boys are forced to grow up instantly, navigating a world filled with systemic and physical abuse. The first chapter of Rainbow acts as both
The story begins ten years after World War II. Japan is a country grappling with the humiliation of defeat and the crushing weight of poverty. Chapter 1 introduces us to the Shounan Special Reformatory, a juvenile detention center that feels less like a school for troubled youth and more like a gulag. The "Rainbow" of the title refers to the
