
Aria Review: A Girl Learning to be a Gondolier on a Flooded Mars Discovers That Slowness Is Its Own Skill
by Kozue Amano
Read the first volume. If it doesn't hook you, put it down. It'll hook you.
Buy ARIA on Amazon →*Affiliate link — I earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
Quick Take
- The definitive "iyashikei" (healing) manga — every chapter is designed to make the reader feel a specific quality of peaceful happiness
- Mars has been terraformed and flooded; Neo-Venezia is a recreation of Venice; Akari becomes a gondolier and learns to appreciate what is in front of her
- 12 volumes complete; one of the most recommended manga for readers who want something that slows them down
Who Is This Manga For?
- Readers who want manga that actively reduces stress rather than creating it
- Fans of world-building through atmosphere rather than conflict
- Anyone who has been recommended iyashikei manga and doesn't know where to start
- Readers who appreciate beauty in ordinary moments
Content Warnings & Age Rating
Age Rating: All Ages Content Warnings: None
ARIA is specifically designed to be calming and beautiful. There is no violence, no conflict that cannot be resolved, and no darkness.
Yu's Rating
| Category | Score |
|---|---|
| Story Depth | ★★★★☆ |
| Art Style | ★★★★★ |
| Character Development | ★★★★☆ |
| Accessibility for Non-Japanese Readers | ★★★★★ |
| Reread Value | ★★★★★ |
Story Overview
In the far future, Mars has been terraformed — its surface flooded to create an ocean planet called Aqua. Humans settled it and built Neo-Venezia: a recreation of Venice, complete with canals, gondolas, and the profession of "undine" — tour guides who row tourists through the city.
Akari Mizunashi has come from Earth to become an undine. She trains with Aria Company, a small operation run by a graceful senior undine named Alicia Florence. Her training involves learning to row, learning the city, and learning to see — to notice what is in front of her with enough attention to communicate its value to others.
There is no villain. There is no threat. Each chapter is a day in Neo-Venezia that contains one small discovery: a hidden canal, a tradition, a season's smell, a conversation that opens a door. The series accumulates these into something larger.
Characters
Akari Mizunashi — Her character trait is an almost supernatural capacity for wonder. She finds the extraordinary in ordinary things not as a trick but as a genuine practice. She writes letters home to a friend on Earth describing what she sees, and the letters are the series' best writing.
Alicia Florence — Akari's teacher, whose serene competence is the standard the series is working toward. Her presence — never hurried, never flustered, always exactly where she needs to be — is the series' visual definition of mastery.
Aika S. Granzchesta and Alice Carroll — Akari's training companions from rival gondola companies; their friendship and their complementary personalities provide the series' social warmth.
President Aria — Akari's cat, who serves as mascot for the Aria Company and provides gentle physical comedy.
Art Style
Amano's art is the series' greatest technical achievement — the canals, the light on water, the architecture of Neo-Venezia are drawn with loving precision. The seasonal light changes across the 12 volumes — summer brightness, autumn gold, winter gray — are used consistently to mark time and mood. The art is designed to be beautiful in a specific, unhurried way.
Cultural Context
ARIA draws from the real Venice — the art, architecture, and gondola culture — filtered through a science fiction premise that removes it from the complicated present-day Venice and places it in a future that can be pure. The terraforming premise allows the world to be beautiful without the weight of its real-world complicated history. The Japanese iyashikei tradition — manga designed specifically to provide emotional restoration — is most completely realized in ARIA.
What I Love About It
The letters. Each volume contains Akari's letter to her friend Ai back on Earth, describing what she has seen and felt. The letters are written in a voice that is trying to convey beauty through words — not succeeding perfectly, because beauty doesn't translate perfectly — but trying with complete sincerity. Reading them in sequence across 12 volumes accumulates into something like reading someone's growth.
What English-Speaking Fans Say
ARIA occupies a unique position for Western manga readers — it is the recommendation that appears in every "I need something calming" thread, the answer to "what do I read when everything feels too much." Readers describe it as producing a specific quality of peace that they have not encountered in other manga. The Alicia graduation arc is consistently cited as the series' most emotional sequence.
Memorable Scene ⚠️ Spoiler Warning
The chapter about the city that might be a ghost — where Akari rows into a part of Neo-Venezia that seems to exist outside normal time — is the series' most explicitly fantastical chapter and demonstrates that ARIA knows its beautiful world also has room for something slightly uncanny.
Similar Manga
- Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou — Post-human world, similar peaceful atmosphere
- Flying Witch — Country life, nature, similar healing energy
- Non Non Biyori — Rural Japan, slow pace, similar mood
- Mushishi — Wandering, nature, similar meditative quality
Reading Order / Where to Start
Volume 1 — the world builds from the first page.
Official English Translation Status
Originally published by ADV Manga/Tokyopop; the complete 12-volume run was released. Currently may require searching secondhand markets as some volumes are out of print.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- The definitive iyashikei manga
- World-building through beauty rather than conflict
- Akari's letters are among manga's finest writing
- Complete
Cons
- Some volumes may be difficult to find in print
- Readers who need conflict or tension will not enjoy this
- The gentle pace requires patience
Format Comparison
| Format | Notes |
|---|---|
| Individual Volumes | Right Stuf/Tokyopop; may be OOP |
| Digital | Check availability |
Where to Buy
Read the first volume. If it doesn't hook you, put it down. It'll hook you.
This post contains affiliate links. If you purchase through these links, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.
*Affiliate link — I earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
Written by
Yu
Manga Enthusiast from Japan
I grew up in Japan and manga literally saved me during a tough time in elementary school. My English isn't perfect, but my love for manga is real — and I want to share it with you.
Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you.