Her career ended in 1986 after publishing her last long work, Liddell of Star Clock (three volumes).
She was one of the main contributors of the magazine besides Sakumi Yoshino, Akemi Matsunae and Wakako MIzuki.
Her books are difficult to get ahold of in Japanese, as Uchida wishes for her works not to be republished, although they have been licensed in other countries.
[1][3] In 2013, fellow manga artist and friend of Uchida's, Akemi Matsunae, said that she was doing well at home, and Uchida allowed for some of her illustrations to be published in the February 2014 edition of the art magazine Geijutsu Shinchō [jp] on Pre-Raphaelite art and its influences.
[3][5] A college student named Sō (草), who finds Neko (ねこ, literally "cat"), an ichimatsu ningyō who talks, walks, moves, and eats as if she is a real human girl.
[9] Uchida was influenced by other shōjo manga artists as well as by European paintings, in particular the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood and Edward Burne-Jones.