An adaptation of the fairy tale "Cinderella", Cinderalla focuses on the eponymous protagonist, who works as a waitress in her father's yakitori (skewered chicken) restaurant.
Taking on part-time work, Cinderalla saves for her ticket, although she goes to buy it, she finds herself rejected because only zombies are allowed to attend.
Realizing that dawn is approaching, when the spell will wear off, Cinderalla dresses and leaves him, although she loses her right eye when she trips.
Now a celebrity, the fairy makes frequent television appearances, while Aki marries a reporter and Akko follows foreign idols.
[6][7] Mizuno took an active role in adapting her fairy tales for an English-language audience:[2] she reversed the manga's original right-to-left art and subsequently redrew some pages.
[1] Envisioning "the feel of a cheap American comic," she recolored the manga with "soft colors" and decided that it should be printed on pulp paper, in contrast to the "too bright and white" Japanese edition.
[11] Fausto Salvadori of the Brazilian newspaper Folha de S.Paulo described it as a sarcastic, bizarre and dark humor version of Cinderella that read like "an episode of The Powerpuff Girls written and directed by Coffin Joe".
[9] The dark humor was also highlighted by Rebeca Fernández of the Spanish newspaper Público who described it as union of Hello Kitty and Chucky.