• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Comment Policy
    • Disclosures & Disclaimers
  • Resources
    • Links, Essays & Articles
    • Fandomology!
    • CLAMP Directory
    • BlogRoll
  • Features & Columns
    • 3 Things Thursday
    • Adventures in the Key of Shoujo
    • Bit & Blips (game reviews)
    • BL BOOKRACK
    • Bookshelf Briefs
    • Bringing the Drama
    • Comic Conversion
    • Fanservice Friday
    • Going Digital
    • It Came From the Sinosphere
    • License This!
    • Magazine no Mori
    • My Week in Manga
    • OFF THE SHELF
    • Not By Manga Alone
    • PICK OF THE WEEK
    • Subtitles & Sensibility
    • Weekly Shonen Jump Recaps
  • Manga Moveable Feast
    • MMF Full Archive
    • Yun Kouga
    • CLAMP
    • Shojo Beat
    • Osamu Tezuka
    • Sailor Moon
    • Fruits Basket
    • Takehiko Inoue
    • Wild Adapter
    • One Piece
    • After School Nightmare
    • Karakuri Odette
    • Paradise Kiss
    • The Color Trilogy
    • To Terra…
    • Sexy Voice & Robo
  • Browse by Author
    • Sean Gaffney
    • Anna Neatrour
    • Michelle Smith
    • Katherine Dacey
    • MJ
    • Brigid Alverson
    • Travis Anderson
    • Phillip Anthony
    • Derek Bown
    • Jaci Dahlvang
    • Angela Eastman
    • Erica Friedman
    • Sara K.
    • Megan Purdy
    • Emily Snodgrass
    • Nancy Thistlethwaite
    • Eva Volin
    • David Welsh
  • MB Blogs
    • A Case Suitable For Treatment
    • Experiments in Manga
    • MangaBlog
    • The Manga Critic
    • Manga Report
    • Soliloquy in Blue
    • Manga Curmudgeon (archive)

Manga Bookshelf

Discussion, Resources, Roundtables, & Reviews

Michelle Smith

Manga the Week of 9/18/24

September 12, 2024 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Anna N and Ash Brown Leave a Comment

SEAN: Welcome to the traditional holiday of the 3rd week of September, National Yen Press Awareness Week.

ASH: Joy to all who celebrate.

SEAN: Yen On has the debut of Even a Replica Can Fall in Love (Replica Datte, Koi wo Suru). A girl is a “replica”, taking the place of another girl whenever there’s a test, or she doesn’t feel like going to school, etc. But then the “replica” fell in love with a boy.

ASH: Perhaps not the most unique premise, but it is of a genre that I enjoy.

SEAN: Hero Syndrome (Yūsha Shōkōgun) features a group of heroes who fight and destroy monsters… only it turns out the monsters are transformed heroes? Is there any way to save them rather than kill them?

ASH: Probably? Hopefully!

SEAN: Also from Yen On: Amalgam Hound: Investigation Bureau Criminal Division Special Unit 2, Apparently, Disillusioned Adventurers Will Save the World 5, A Certain Magical Index NT 3, Chitose Is in the Ramune Bottle 6.5, Gods’ Games We Play 3, I’m the Villainess, So I’m Taming the Final Boss 9, The Princess of Convenient Plot Devices 6, and Spy Classroom 8.

Yen Press debuts From Old Country Bumpkin to Master Swordsman: My Hotshot Disciples Are All Grown Up Now, and They Won’t Leave Me Alone (Katainaka no Ossan, Kensei ni Naru – Tada no Inaka no Kenjutsu Shihan Datta no ni, Taisei shita Deshi-tachi ga Ore wo Hottekurenai ken), the manga adaptation of the light novel J-Novel Club is putting out. It’s about a humble sword instructor who is now invited to the royal capital by his former students. What can they learn from an average guy like him? For those who like “Gee, I’m just a basic guy, anyone could do what I do” protagonists (hint: no they can’t do what he does). This runs in Dokodemo Young Champion.

Pink & Habanero (Pink to Habanero) is a shoujo series from Margaret. A girl and a boy absolutely do not get along at school. Then she finds out his secret… a part-time job! This feels like a series you’d see in 2004, but it’s circa 2021.

MICHELLE: Yeah, it doesn’t sound riveting, but… Margaret!

ANNA: Here for the Margaret series enthusiasm too!

ASH: Yup!

SEAN: Spring Storm and Monster (Haru no Arashi to Monster) is a shoujo series from Hana to Yume. It’s the latest series from the creator of Cheeky Brat and Stray Cat & Wolf. A girl who just wants to quietly get through life finds her new stepbrother is a rude, violent jerk. This feels like a series you’d see in 2001, but it’s circa 2022.

MICHELLE : Heh.

ASH: Everything old is new again.

SEAN: Tougen Anki: Legend of the Cursed Blood is a Weekly Shonen Champion series with an anime coming soon. Our hero finds out that he has oni blood… right before his father is murdered for that fact. Now the boy wants revenge.

ASH: I do enjoy I good revenge tale.

SEAN: Also from Yen Press: Black Summoner 3 (a J-Novel Club imprint), Cheerful Amnesia 4, Dead Mount Death Play 12, The Executioner and Her Way of Life 5, The Girl I Saved on the Train Turned Out to Be My Childhood Friend 7, Goblin Slayer Side Story: Year One 11, God Bless the Mistaken 3, The Holy Grail of Eris 8, I Want to Be a Receptionist in This Magical World 5, Is It Wrong to Try to Pick Up Girls in a Dungeon? Memoria Freese 3, Kakegurui – Compulsive Gambler – 17, Kowloon Generic Romance 8, The Maid I Hired Recently Is Mysterious 7, Me and My Beast Boss 3, Monthly Girls’ Nozaki-kun 15, Murciélago 24, Re:ZERO -Starting Life in Another World-, Chapter 4: The Sanctuary and the Witch of Greed 8, Secrets of the Silent Witch 3, Shadows House 7, The Shiunji Family Children 2, Sister and Giant: A Young Lady Is Reborn in Another World 2, Sugar Apple Fairy Tale 3, Tales of the Kingdom 5, This Monster Wants to Eat Me 2, Toilet-bound Hanako-kun 20, Tsubaki-chou Lonely Planet 8, and Your Turn to Die: Majority Vote Death Game 5 (the final volume).

MICHELLE: I should catch up on Monthly Girls’ Nozaki-kun!

ASH: Oh, good! I wasn’t just imagining I saw Monthly Girls’ Nozaki-kun somewhere in there!

SEAN: Viz Media debuts Trillion Game, a new series from the writer of Eyeshield 21/Dr. Stone and the artist behind Crying Freeman. After seeing two multi-billionaires enjoying their success, the series flashes back to middle school, seeing how they made their billions. This runs in Big Comic Superior.

ANNA: What??? I am a bit of an Ikegami fan due to Mai the Psychic Girl being one of the first manga I ever read. Oh, the memories!!!

ASH: Definitely interested in this one. Seems like forever since we’ve seen Ikegami’s work!

SEAN: Also from Viz: #DRCL midnight children 3, Choujin X 7, Fool Night 2, Haikyu!! 3-in-1 2, Insomniacs After School 7, and Tokyo These Days 3 (the final volume).

Tokyopop has a new one-shot, The Troublesome Guest of Sotomura Detective Agency (Sotomura Tanteisha no Manekarezaru Kyaku). This is a BL series from LYNX about a detective and his lover, who at first is just a detective’s assistant and “it’s just sex” partner, but something more is growing between them.

MICHELLE: I don’t think I can resist detective-adjacent BL.

ANNA: What exactly is the “something more” that is growing between them???

ASH: What could it be??

SEAN: Square Enix has the 2nd volume of Just Like Mona Lisa and the 12th volume of Cherry Magic! Thirty Years of Virginity Can Make You a Wizard?!.

ASH: I’ve fallen behind on Cherry Magic!, but really enjoyed earlier volumes.

SEAN: Debuting from Seven Seas is I Abandoned My Engagement Because My Sister is a Tragic Heroine, but Somehow I Became Entangled with a Righteous Prince (Higeki no Heroine Buru Imouto no Sei de Konyaku Hakishita no desu ga, Naze ka Seigikan no Tsuyoi Outaishi ni Karamareru you ni narimashita), the manga adaptation of the light novel which had an early digital release two weeks ago. It comes out in Comic Gardo.

There’s also Mushoku Tensei: Jobless Reincarnation – A Journey of Two Lifetimes, which is a sort of half artbook half guidebook dedicated to the popular series.

Also from Seven Seas: Dungeon People 4 and Obey Me! The Comic 3 (the final volume).

Kodansha has three debuts. I Cross-Dressed for the IRL Meetup (Josou-shite Off-Kai ni Sanka shite mita) is a shonen title from Twi-Sirius. A girl is happy to meet his three friends in real life for the first time, including her crush… but is reluctant to tell them she’s actually a guy. Then she finds out her crush ALSO has a secret. Another in the welcome series of debuts examining gender identity.

ASH: Love these sorts of debuts.

SEAN: Spoil Me Plzzz, Hinamori-san! (Amaesasete Hinamori-san!) is a Comic Yuri Hime title, so you know the genre. Our heroine admires her perfect, flawless, put-together sempai… then finds out the sempai is far from it, and wants attention desperately!

Tank Chair (Sensha Isu – Tank Chair) is a Shonen Sirius series about a girl who takes on assassin jobs… but she’s not the assassin. her comatose brother is, and he can only wake up when faced with murderous intent!

ASH: I had seen some passing praise of this series, but had no idea that was the plot.

SEAN: Also in print: BLOOD BLADE 3, Blood on the Tracks 17 (the final volume), Fire Force Omnibus 12 (the final volume), I Can’t Say No to the Lonely Girl 4, Sailor Moon Naoko Takeuchi Collection 10, and Twilight Out of Focus 5.

For digital-only, we see How to Treat a Lady Knight Right 7 (the final volume), Hozuki’s Coolheadedness 22, My Master Has No Tail 12 (the final volume), We’re New at This 17, and Ya Boy Kongming! 17.

Four debuts for J-Novel Club. Accidentally in Love: The Witch, the Knight, and the Love Potion Slipup (Koisuru Majo wa Elite Kishi ni Horegusuri wo Nomasete Shimaimashita) is the manga adaptation of the light novel JNC already released, and it runs in Drecomics.

From Desk Job to Death Beam: In Another World with My Almighty Lasers (Saikyō Death Beam o Uteru Salaryman, Isekai o Yuku) is a light novel with another poor schlub accidentally murdered by a goddess. She offers him life in another world with the ability to shoot lasers AND the ability to attract cute beastgirls. What’s not to love?

ANNA: That does sound like a pretty good deal.

ASH: I’ve certainly heard of worse ones.

SEAN: Lacey Longs for Freedom: The Dawn Witch’s Low-Key Life after Defeating the Demon King (Akatsuki no Majo Lacey wa Jiyū ni Ikitai) is about a girl who THOUGHT her plotline was “get powerful magic, defeat the demon king, get married”, but then finds it’s really “broken engagement” after all. Now she can live on her own… but wait, *can* she live on her own?

Safe & Sound in the Arms of an Elite Knight (Doinaka no Hakugai Reijou wa Outo no Elite Kishi ni Dekiaisareru) is the manga adaptation of the light novel JNC already released, and it runs in Drecomics.

Also from J-Novel Club: An Archdemon’s Dilemma: How to Love Your Elf Bride 18, the 3rd The Banished Former Hero Lives as He Pleases manga, Chillin’ in Another World with Level 2 Super Cheat Powers 15, Finding Avalon: The Quest of a Chaosbringer 4, the 5th Fushi no Kami: Rebuilding Civilization Starts With a Village manga, I Could Never Be a Succubus! 4, Isekai Tensei: Recruited to Another World 8, My Magical Career at Court: Living the Dream After My Nightmare Boss Fired Me from the Mages’ Guild! 5, Now I’m a Demon Lord! Happily Ever After with Monster Girls in My Dungeon 10, and Only I Know That This World Is a Game 5.

Ghost Ship gives us Into the Deepest, Most Unknowable Dungeon 9.

And Seven Seas’ mature books have two BL debuts. After School Etude (Houkago no Etude) features two men paired for ballet practice. Will love follow? (Yes.) This runs in Be x Boy Gold.

ANNA: Ballet manga!!!!!

ASH: Oh, very nice.

SEAN: And Hatsukoi Note is a one-shot from Dear +. Our hero comes across an internet diary confessing a gay crush… and he knows who the crush is! Time to play matchmaker… but will that go well?

ASH: Eventually, maybe?

SEAN: And no print titles for Airship next week, but we get three early digital books. Easygoing Territory Defense by the Optimistic Lord: Production Magic Turns a Nameless Village into the Strongest Fortified City 3, Modern Villainess: It’s Not Easy Building a Corporate Empire Before the Crash 5, and Raven of the Inner Palace 7 (the final volume).

Are you more aware of Yen Press? (And yes, they will be back next week with the runoff.) What are you getting?

ANNA: I want a ballet manga drawn by Ryoichi Ikegami, has that happened yet?

SEAN: Ballet assassins who kill rich bad people watching them from the opera box seats without anyone knowing? (This is just me suggesting, of course.)

ASH: I would absolutely read that.

Filed Under: FEATURES, manga the week of

Pick of the Week: Otonari Complex

September 9, 2024 by Michelle Smith, Sean Gaffney, Ash Brown and Anna N Leave a Comment

MICHELLE: Otonari Complex for sure. True, the premise of a couple with confusing gender presentations is not new, but I haven’t personally read one in ages. Also, Makoto on this cover is reminding me of Kuranosuke from Princess Jellyfish, and I am here for it.

SEAN: Tempted as I am to ride the current meme and choose the Hatsune Miku title, I have to agree that Otonari Complex looks like the most interesting debut this week.

ASH: I’m not going to be the one to break this trend! Otonari Complex is definitely the debut that most intrigues me this week.

ANNA: All in for Otonari Complex!

Filed Under: PICK OF THE WEEK

Bookshelf Briefs 9/8/24

September 8, 2024 by Sean Gaffney and Michelle Smith 1 Comment

Bakemonogatari, Vol. 22 | By NISIOISIN and Oh!great | Kodansha Manga – The manga ends here, but of course, the novels are ongoing, and there’s almost twenty more that were never adapted. As such, this book tries to tell you what happens. Some are quick and obvious (Tsubasa becomes a terrorist FOR PEACE; Karen is a cop like her parents), some are relatively static (Tsukihi is forever unchanging), and some can’t be summed up in the manga no matter what (Nadeko’s descent into evil is hinted at, but there’s nothing about her ascent into specialist life). And then there’s Ougi, who shows up here and almost causes Araragi to fall several stories to his death, leading to more fantastic art. If you avoided the manga as you’d read the books and seen the anime, give it another chance. It’s worthy of standing beside them. – Sean Gaffney

Blue Box, Vol. 11 | By Kouji Miura | Viz Media – The bulk of this volume is resolving Yumeka’s past relationship with Chinatsu, and showing her what it’s like to love playing basketball again. The over-competitive feel to sports is one reason I always hated participating in them myself, so some of this rings true to me, but I definitely appreciate them making up and crying and Chinatsu’s simple desire just to play basketball with her friend. That said, I’m not sure if the next volume will be the “they get together” volume, but it sure feels like it. Everyone who doesn’t know them thinks they’re a couple, Chinatsu is ludicrously happy with everything he did for her the last two volumes, and of course Yumeka calls him a great big coward. Sounds like it’s headed for a confession to me. This remains must-read Jump. – Sean Gaffney

Delicious in Dungeon, Vol. 14 | By Ryoko Kui| Yen Press – I do appreciate the best joke of this final volume, which is that Laios’ greatest desire is not “rescue my beloved dead sister” but “see cool monsters!” Honestly, Falin fans who watched the anime may end up a bit disappointed with how little she gets to do, as after her resurrection and happy ending we get an epilogue, a quick story set after the end, and that’s it. The best part of the book is actually Izutsumi, who is forced to figure out what to do next, and does this by touring the rest of the cast to ask what *they’re* doing next. It fits her character and is cute. I also appreciate that Marcille is not going to elf jail forever, or even the elf crime army, though her relationship with Falin will forever be vague, alas. This was an amazing series; I adored it. – Sean Gaffney

I Can’t Say No to the Lonely Girl, Vol. 3 | By Kashikaze| Kodansha Manga – Last time I said these two would work it out, and that would still be true, if it were not for the fact that parents exist in the world, and it’s not a guarantee that they’re going to care much about their child’s burgeoning lesbian desires. So yes, Sora’s mom appears, announces they’re moving to a different city, and does not really appear to even like Sora all that much. Cue cliffhanger. Fortunately, that’s just the end of the book, and the rest is good yuri romance stuff, and also features Ayaka wondering why she’s so hung up on the scholarship, and whether she even wants to be a teacher at all. Teenage years are where people can realize that maybe there’s a different path. Hopefully Sora will be allowed to continue on hers. – Sean Gaffney

Komi Can’t Communicate, Vol. 30 | By Tomohito Oda | Viz Media – This is a transitional volume, which means as usual it’s hard to review because it’s a bunch of short vignettes. It’s also very much anti-OT3, possibly as it’s been reading my reviews. Kawai blatantly asks if she can marry both Komi and Tadano, and while they still remain friends, spouses is out of the question. As for Manbagi, she and her Pair the Spares not-quite-boyfriend get the cliffhanger ending where a confession means that status may change soon. Other than that, it’s a lot of goofy comedy, which is hit or miss, and a lot of really sweet blushing and romance, which is usually a hit. As with most recent volumes of this series that coast along, though, I keep looking at my watch wondering how many volumes till the end. – Sean Gaffney

March Comes in Like a Lion, Vol. 2 | By Chica Umino | Denpa – I really like Rei Kiriyama, the protagonist of March Comes in Like a Lion. Shogi is all he has. It’s a literal lifeline that he’s using to create a place where he belongs, and I loved seeing his reaction to two back-to-back victories over opponents who essentially just resigned themselves to losing partway through. That said, there are truly some terrible people in Rei’s orbit. Those defeated opponents make the list in separate ways, but Rei’s adoptive sister Kyoko absolutely takes the cake. She takes perverse delight in informing Rei about the hardships awaiting his opponents should he defeat them, and I wish he wasn’t so receptive to her words, because she’s a major piece of trash whom I hope gets hit by a fictional bus in the next volume. – Michelle Smith

My Journey to Her | By Yuna Hirasawa | Kodansha Manga (digital only) – We’ve seen quite a bit of biographical manga lately, especially of the LGBTQ variety. This one is about the author’s gender-affirming surgery, as well as her gender dysphoria and everything surrounding that which came before it. It’s quite well done, presenting a ton of information while always remembering that it has to keep us entertained and not simply present gobs of text. Yuna emphasizes that this is her own journey, and not a typical or average one, and a lot of what happens to her is unique. There’s also frank discussion of the surgery itself, so be prepared for that, but again, it’s presented in a way that keeps the reader wanting to know more and it has a few really good jokes. I just feel really good for Yuna by the end, even as she realizes that this is only the beginning. – Sean Gaffney

Noss & Zakuro, Vol. 1 | By Rariatto | Seven Seas – Well, this was delightful. It does appear to be an actual manga that runs in an online manga magazine, albeit a very obscure one. (It’s best known for that “skateboarding maids” series.) This stars Noss (aka Nosferatu), an introverted vampire who has that Morticia Addams look, and Zakuro (aka Dracula), a cheerful, happy vampire teen. Together, they have adorably cute slice-of-life adventures. Sometimes they meet zombies; sometimes they meet weird robot girls. The whole thing has the feel of a story you’d happily show to kids, and I think that’s likely the best audience, and the one Seven Seas is going for. It’s just cute as the dickens. And I appreciate how Noss’s clear massive introversion is not used for comedy all that much. – Sean Gaffney

Pupposites Attract, Vol. 1 | By Hono Natsuna | Kodansha Comics (digital only) – I will admit, the dogs are definitely the best reason to read what is otherwise a pretty typical romance. Our lead guy is a firefighter who’s pretty meek and mild, and he has an excitable, tiny little dog. Our heroine is a teacher who has trouble controlling her own strength, and she has a huge but very passive, introverted dog. They both make each other feel happy, but neither one is really sure if it’s anything beyond “good friends and dog buddies,” though his younger brother can certainly see where things are going. It’s a definite great title for dog lovers, but romance fans may need to wait another volume or two to see if this is going to be a fast romance or a slow burn. I really hope it’s not a slow burn. – Sean Gaffney

A Sign of Affection, Vol. 9 | By Suu Morishita | Kodansha Comics – There’s a weird feeling during this whole volume. For the most part, it’s sweet as pie, with our leads searching for an apartment to move into and doing so. There’s discussion of the needs that a deaf person would have for things like smoke alarms, etc. And we get to see the secondary couple and how they moved in together, which I kind of wish got a chapter of its own but is also sweet. What’s more, we almost get a sex scene, but it’s pretty apparent that Yuki’s not ready for it, so they both hold off. That said… there’s a secret hanging out there that she doesn’t know, and I suspect it will make life more difficult for them in the next volume. It can’t ALL be sweet fluff, though the sweet fluff is lovely to read. – Sean Gaffney

Tamon’s B-Side, Vol. 4 | By Yuki Shiwasu | Viz Media – The best part of this volume is seeing all the “we’re on a beach trip!” romcom shenanigans run up against the fact that Utage is not a romantic lead. Well, she *is*, yes, but she’s a fan first and foremost, and therefore all of these situations just run up against the fact that she doesn’t even think of the idea of being in a relationship with Tamon or any of them… mostly. We’re seeing a couple of cracks in the wall. But it’s a big wall. Fortunately, as with the author’s previous series, this runs on comedy overreactions and shouting at people, and it does that very well. This won’t get an anime, but if it did it would be fast and loud (and probably have an animation budget of $1.98). That said… the takeaway from this book is THAT BLUSH at the end. Cute! – Sean Gaffney

Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou, Vol. 5 | By Hitoshi Ashinano | Seven Seas – I was right that this series is not quite dark enough to kill off its elderly cast on-screen, but it’s a near thing. This last omnibus moves the timeline even faster than the previous one, as we start with Makki working part-time at the cafe and struggling to work out what to do, then doing a job separate from Takahiro, then living with Takahiro but he says she’s his sister, to visiting Alpha with her kid. Fortunately for Alpha, she manages to get the cafe back to what it used to look like, and things are back to where they were… except Alpha now realizes that she doesn’t like being lonely, and wants someone else around. How it happens is merely suggested, but by the end of the book, Kokone is there as well. We all saw this coming. A fantastic book, and I hope they have a wonderful post-apocalypse. – Sean Gaffney

Filed Under: Bookshelf Briefs

Manga the Week of 9/11/24

September 5, 2024 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Anna N and Ash Brown Leave a Comment

SEAN: It is getting cooler? No? Ah well, had to ask. Back to manga.

ASH: I had hope there for a moment.

SEAN: Airship has two print titles out next week: She Professed Herself Pupil of the Wise Man 11 and There’s No Freaking Way I’ll be Your Lover! Unless… 5.

ASH: Unless!

SEAN: The early digital debut is Witch and Mercenary (Majo to Yōhei). Everyone knows witches are evil. Witches should be dead. Everyone but the witch, who’s wondering why everyone seems to hate her. So she hires a mercenary to go with her on adventures.

Dark Horse have a deluxe edition of the old Trigun manga, containing all the volumes (this is just Trigun proper, not the continuation) in a handsome hardcover.

ASH: I’ll admit, I do like this trend of deluxe releases.

SEAN: There’s a mature Seven Seas debut I will slot here, a manwha they are calling Perfect Buddy and also known as XXX Buddy, but you can probably fill in the x’s and you’ll be correct. Co-worker catches another co-worker doing naughty things in the company bathroom. Sex follows.

ASH: Uh-oh!

SEAN: Ghost Ship also has an 11th volume of The 100 Girlfriends Who Really, Really, Really, Really, REALLY Love You.

ASH: One of these days I really will get around to giving this series a try.

SEAN: No new series for J-Novel Club next week, but we do see The Brilliant Healer’s New Life in the Shadows 4, Death’s Daughter and the Ebony Blade 7-2 (the final volume), Heavenly Swords of the Twin Stars 3, I’m a Noble on the Brink of Ruin, So I Might as Well Try Mastering Magic 3, Let This Grieving Soul Retire 5, My Quiet Blacksmith Life in Another World 9, The Mythical Hero’s Otherworld Chronicles 8, the 2nd manga volume of The Reincarnation of the Strongest Exorcist in Another World, To Another World… with Land Mines! 9, and You Like Me, Not My Daughter?! 7 (the final volume).

For print, Kodansha Manga has FAIRY TAIL: 100 Years Quest 16, Kei X Yaku: Bound By Law 3, Turns Out My Online Friend is My Real-Life Boss! 2, and the 4th and final volume of Virgin Love.

The digital debut is Manchuria Opium Squad (Manshuu Ahen Squad), a dark seinen series from Comic Days. A soldier in 1930s Manchuria loses an eye, so is banished to an agricultural station where he’s abused by everyone around him. Then he finds… poppies. Unfortunately, this just leads to more problems. At Anime NYC, this was compared to Breaking Bad.

MICHELLE: It sounds depressing.

ANNA: Indeed.

ASH: Huh.

SEAN: Also digital: Altair: A Record of Battles 26, Gang King 21, Nina the Starry Bride 13, Quality Assurance in Another World 11, and Tokyo Tarareba Girls Returns 2 3.

ANNA: Always happy for more Nina the Starry Bride!

ASH: And Tokyo Tarareba Girls 2!

SEAN: Two debuts from One Peace Books next week! Hero Without a Class: Who Even Needs Skills?! (Mushoku no Eiyuu: Betsu ni Skill Nanka Iranakattan daga) is the manga version of an as-yet unlicensed light novel, which runs in Earth Star Online. Betcha know the plot. Yup. Son of two famous people in a world where your fantasy “class” determines everything doesn’t have one. Cue bad things.

ASH: Bad things happen, ya know?

SEAN: Kurokiya-san Wants to Lead Him Around by the Nose (Tedama ni Toritai Kurokiya-san) is a romcom from Comic Meteor. Our heroine is about to flunk out of her year, so she gets her unflappable childhood friend to tutor her. She wants to seduce him. Alas, he’s unflappable.

ASH: Ha!

SEAN: Debuts from Seven Seas. Hatsune Miku: Cantarella ~Poison of Blue~ (Cantarella – Ao no Dokuyaku) is based on a Vocaloid song, and imagines Hatsune Miku as Lucrezia Borgia. It ran in Age Premium, and is a one-shot.

ASH: I feel like it’s been a moment since we’ve had a Borgia manga.

SEAN: Otonari Complex is a Kurofune Momo series about a guy who has pretty features and his childhood friend, a girl with handsome features, who both have to deal with gender presentation, their own feelings for each other, and other friends of theirs who may also have romantic feelings.

MICHELLE: I have heard good things about this one!

ANNA: It does sound intriguing!

ASH: My curiosity is piqued.

SEAN: Also from Seven Seas: A Cat from Our World and the Forgotten Witch 3, The Duke of Death and His Maid 14, The Eccentric Doctor of the Moon Flower Kingdom 7, Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation: Mo Dao Zu Shi The Comic 7, His Majesty the Demon King’s Housekeeper 7, Hunting in Another World With My Elf Wife 5, The Invisible Man and His Soon-to-Be Wife 4, Karate Survivor in Another World 6, Last Game 6, Monster Musume 17, Mushoku Tensei: Roxy Gets Serious 12 (the final volume), and The White Mage Doesn’t Want to Raise the Hero’s Level 3.

Square Enix has The Strongest Sage with the Weakest Crest 20 and Tokyo Aliens 7.

SuBLime’s one release is a BL title, Takara’s Treasure (Takara no Biidoro), a Dear + done-in-one. Three years ago, a man was consoled while going through grief by the titular Takara. Now he’s come to Tokyo to find Takara… even if Takara wants nothing to do with him!

Viz has a debut. Disney Twisted-Wonderland: The Manga – Anthology is exactly what you think it is.

ASH: Indeed.

SEAN: Also from Viz: Animal Crossing: New Horizons 7, Call of the Night 17, Fly Me to the Moon 25, Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End 11, Helck 11, Love’s in Sight! 8 (the final volume), Mao 18, and Naruto: Sasuke’s Story—The Uchiha and the Heavenly Stardust: The Manga 2 (the final volume).

ASH: I should really read Frieren at some point; more than one of my coworkers have been enjoying the series.

SEAN: Yen Press has some J-Novel Club print editions, as we see Ascendance of a Bookworm 26, In Another World With My Smartphone 28, the 5th Tearmoon Empire manga, and the 10th The Unwanted Undead Adventurer manga.

ASH: Bookworm! (I won’t be able to say that for too much longer, will I?)

SEAN: And they’re also releasing Bungo Stray Dogs: Dazai, Chuuya, Age Fifteen 2.

Something for everyone. What are you getting?

Filed Under: FEATURES, manga the week of

Pick of the Week: Bye, Bye, Bookworm

September 2, 2024 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Ash Brown, Anna N and Katherine Dacey Leave a Comment

SEAN: Apologies to Ai Yazawa, and I’m sure someone will pick her later on. But this is the final volume of Ascendance of a Bookworm, and I have to pick it. It’s made choices I wouldn’t, but it’s a series that has had some of the best worldbuilding in light novels for the last few years, and Myne/Rozemyne is a fantastic main character. Long May She Read.

MICHELLE: I’ll gladly accept that responsibility. *Last Quarter* for me! I don’t know anything about it but it’s Ai Yazawa and that’s enough for me.

ASH: I wholeheartedly support both of those picks, but I’m still going to add a third one into the mix; Giga Town: The Guide to Manga Iconography is a release that I’ve been very curious about since I first heard about it. I’m looking forward to some educational reading.

ANNA: New Ai Yazawa for me!

KATE: I’m joining Ash in making Giga Town my pick of the week; I’ve been excited about this title since the Mangasplainers first announced it last year.

Filed Under: PICK OF THE WEEK

Manga the Week of 9/4/24

August 29, 2024 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Ash Brown and Anna N Leave a Comment

SEAN: School time! Send those beloved youngsters back to school to learn new things and avoid getting COVID.

ASH: Yeah…

SEAN: We begin with Viz, which debuts a classic manga from way back in the 1990s, before most of you were even born! It’s also from Ai Yazawa! Last Quarter (Kagen no Tsuki) ran in Ribon, this features a girl who, after almost dying, sees another girl in her dreams. I think it’s coming out in two 300-page volumes.

MICHELLE: Woo!

ASH: Oh, nice! I’d forgotten this had been picked up.

ANNA: I had no idea but I am excited!

SEAN: Also from Viz: Chainsaw Man 16, Dark Gathering 9, Let’s Do It Already! 2, Like a Butterfly 8, Mashle: Magic and Muscles 17, Sakamoto Days 13, Wolf Girl and Black Prince 9, and Yona of the Dawn 42.

MICHELLE: I desperately need to catch up with Yona!

ASH: Same.

ANNA: Me too, but this is such a fun series to binge.

SEAN: Udon Entertainment has an interesting release. Giga Town: The Guide to Manga Iconography (Giga Town – Manpu Zufu) is a look at all the things readers take for granted that everyone knows. Sweat drops, anger marks, etc.

ASH: Looking forward to this one!

ANNA: Sounds cool.

SEAN: Tokyopop debuts Let’s Eat Together, Aki and Haru (Aki wa Haru to Gohan wo Tabetai), a foodie title with a dash of BL as two roommates try to feed themselves properly. It runs in bamB!.

Steamship debuts Loved by Two Fiancés (Futari no Konyakusha ni Dekiai Sarete). This smutty title from Ichijinsha’s Lovebites is about a woman who’s engaged to a sweet, caring, loving man… then she finds he has a hidden sadistic side!

ANNA: Oh no!

SEAN: Also from Steamship: Before You Discard Me, I Shall Have My Way With You 2.

From Square Enix we get The Apothecary Diaries 12, My Clueless First Friend 7, and Smoking Behind the Supermarket with You 3.

ASH: The Apothecary Diaries is another one I’ve been meaning to catch up on sooner rather than later.

SEAN: Seven Seas has a debut, I Quit My Apprenticeship as a Royal Court Wizard to Become a Magic Item Craftswoman (Kyuutei Madou-shi Minarai Oyamete, Mahou Aitemu Shokunin ni Narimasu), which runs in Piccoma. The plot is that a Royal Court Wizard apprentice quits her job to become a craftswoman of magical items. Funny, that.

They also have a novel debut, which is not Airship, or danmei, but it’s Korean, which I guess is why it’s not with the light novels. Lout of Count’s Family sure has the plot of a standard “male villainess” story, though, as a guy wakes up in the body of the arrogant lord the hero beats up in his favorite book. Screw that, he will forge his own destiny!

ASH: A Korean novel, interesting!

SEAN: Also from Seven Seas: CALL TO ADVENTURE! Defeating Dungeons with a Skill Board 8, My Sister Took My Fiancé and Now I’m Being Courted by a Beastly Prince 2, Reincarnated as a Dragon Hatchling 6, Sword of the Demon Hunter: Kijin Gentōshō 5, This Is Screwed Up, but I Was Reincarnated as a GIRL in Another World! 13, True Love Fades Away When the Contract Ends 2, We Started a Threesome!! 3 (the final volume), and Yakuza Fiancé: Raise wa Tanin ga Ii 8.

Lots of Kodansha Manga titles next week, but no debuts. We get Anyway, I’m Falling in Love with You 4, I Got Reincarnated in a (BL) World of Big (Man) Boobs 2, I’m Giving the Disgraced Noble Lady I Rescued a Crash Course in Naughtiness 7, Initial D Omnibus 3, Medalist 4, ORIGIN 6, Rent-A-Girlfriend 26, and Vinland Saga Deluxe 4.

ASH: Those deluxe volume sure do look pretty.

SEAN: And digitally we see Blue Lock 27, A Condition Called Love 15, Even Given the Worthless “Appraiser” Class, I’m Actually the Strongest 11, How to Grill Our Love 10, Life 18, My Wife is a Little Intimidating 9, Sayabito: Swords of Destiny 4, Shangri-La Frontier 17, and Those Snow White Notes 21.

J-Novel Club has one debut: Dagashi-ya Yahagi: Setting Up a Sweets Shop in Another World (Dagashiya Yahagi Isekai ni Shutten Shimasu). Our “hit by a truck” hero ends up in a fantasy world with classes and skills… but his destined role is “penny candy shop owner”. Can he eke out a slow life, or will the fact that he’s a main character in a Japanese light novel make that impossible?

Also from JN-C: After-School Dungeon Diver: Level Grinding in Another World 3, Ascendance of a Bookworm 33 (the final volume), Campfire Cooking in Another World with My Absurd Skill 15, Cooking with Wild Game 25, the 3rd manga volume of A Livid Lady’s Guide to Getting Even: How I Crushed My Homeland with My Mighty Grimoires, The Misfit of Demon King Academy 7, the 2nd manga volume of My Quiet Blacksmith Life in Another World, and Seirei Gensouki: Spirit Chronicles 25. Bye, Rozemyne! Hopefully we’ll get the Hannelore spinoff soon!

ASH: Bookworm!

SEAN: Guess who forgot a publisher again last week. Meeeee! Hanashi Media has My Pet Is a Saintess 3 out THIS week.

ASH: There are so many smaller presses these days, which I love to see, though it can be challenging to keep track of them all.

SEAN: There’s a Mature Manga debut from Seven Seas that I can slot into the Ghost Ship section. At 25:00 in Akasaka (25ji, Akasaka de) is a BL title with a live-action movie out now. Two actors and old school acquaintances have to research the role of gay men they’re playing. Well, one of them does. The other one might not need to?

ASH: Hmmm, I think I’ve read an older series with a similar premise.

SEAN: And from actual Ghost Ship, Ayakashi Triangle 11.

That lout and his Korean webtoon-self has ensured there are no print novels from Airship, but we do get an early digital debut: I Abandoned My Engagement Because My Sister is a Tragic Heroine, but Somehow I Became Entangled with a Righteous Prince (Higeki no Heroine Buru Imouto no Sei de Konyaku Hakishita no desu ga, Naze ka Seigikan no Tsuyoi Outaishi ni Karamareru you ni narimashita). A saint is rather stunned when her little sister says she’s a villainess, and even more stunned when this means her fiance breaks off the engagement to her. And now the Crown Prince is investigating her? Isn’t this all about her sister?!?!

And we also see Reborn as a Space Mercenary: I Woke Up Piloting the Strongest Starship! 10.

What will you be reading instead of listening to the teacher next week?

Filed Under: FEATURES, manga the week of

Pick of the Week: Pigeons, Glitches, and Hokuto

August 26, 2024 by Michelle Smith, Sean Gaffney, Ash Brown and Katherine Dacey Leave a Comment

MICHELLE: I’ll cast my vote for the fourth and final volume of Glitch. Not that I have managed to read any of the earlier volumes yet, but it’s still the most compelling release for me this week.

SEAN: There’s a new Tearmoon Empire, tra-la, tra-la, let’s avoid the guillotine together!

ASH: This week I’m going to go with raunchy romantic comedy danmei with a delightfully ridiculous premise. It’s You’ve Got Mail: The Perils of Pigeon Post for me!

KATE: This is one of those weeks where I’m overwhelmed by how many titles are being released but underwhelmed at the selection. If I had to make a choice, though, my vote would go to volume four of the new deluxe edition of Tokyo Babylon. Yes, Dark Horse and Tokyopop have both issued their own editions of this CLAMP classic, but the new Yen Press version looks pretty snazzy and is giving me Borders-in-2006 vibes.

Filed Under: PICK OF THE WEEK

Manga the Week of 8/28/24

August 22, 2024 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Ash Brown and Anna N Leave a Comment

SEAN: This is the way the August ends.

ASH: Not with a bang, but still plenty of manga. (And light novels.)

SEAN: Four print titles from Airship, with two debuts. I’m the Heroic Knight of an Intergalactic Empire! (Atashi wa Seikan Kokka no Eiyū Kishi!) is a spinoff of I’m the Evil Lord of an Intergalactic Empire!. It seems to star a knight? I suspect things will go badly for her, given the parent series.

ASH: Seems accurate.

SEAN: Ripping Someone Open Only Makes Them Bleed (Hara o Wattara Chi ga Deru Dakesa) is the latest trauma from the creator of I Want to Eat Your Pancreas. A high school girl has what seems to be the perfect life… and she’s made sure her every move and utterance is done to help that along. Then a boy shows up who looks just like the main character of her favorite book, and bad things start to follow.

ASH: That title sounds intense.

ANNA: Yikes!

SEAN: And we also see the 2nd and final volume of The Evil Queen’s Beautiful Principles and Sword of the Demon Hunter: Kijin Gentōshō 6.

Early digital volumes, meanwhile, give us I’m in Love with the Villainess: She’s so Cheeky for a Commoner 3 (the final volume) and Trapped in a Dating Sim: Otome Games Are Tough For Us, Too! 2.

A debut from Cross Infinite World, as we see Too Strong to Belong! Banished to Another World! (Saikyou Joshi, Isekai e Iku!). A girl is simply TOO STRONG TO DIE in her original world, so God banishes her to another world where she can supposedly be a weak love interest and get a hot boyfriend. But… will that REALLY be how it goes?

ASH: Ha!

SEAN: Also from CIW: By a Twist of Fate, I’m Attending the Royal Academy in Disguise 2, The Do-Over Damsel Conquers the Dragon Emperor 5, and So You Want to Live the Slow Life? A Guide to Life in the Beastly Wilds 4.

Denpa Books has a 5th omnibus of Gambling Apocalypse: KAIJI.

ASH: Definitely reading this whenever it ends up being released. Could it really be next week?

SEAN: Ghost Ship has Ero Ninja Scrolls 6, Rise of the Outlaw Tamer and His S-Rank Cat Girl 4, and Survival in Another World with My Mistress! 6.

There’s also a mature Seven Seas debut, which I slot in here. This is a new danmei title, You’ve Got Mail: The Perils of Pigeon Post – Fei Ge Jiao You Xu Jin Shen. How did gay men in 400 AD exchange dick pics, you ask? Via an ancient singles’ club and some really good art! This is a “raunchy romantic comedy”.

MICHELLE: Huh. Somehow, I hadn’t heard of this one.

ASH: I am absolutely delighted by this premise.

SEAN: There’s one debut from J-Novel Club: The Blessing of Liefe: Leave This Magical Letdown Alone! (Liefe no Shukufuku: Muzokusei Mahou shika Tsukaenai Oochikobore Toshite Hottoite Kudasai). A girl is born with the abilities of Liefe… which means she can only cast really difficult spells that are mostly useless. Naturally, she and her mother are banished and she is laughed at by all. Can a magical academy for arrogant young nobles help her?

ASH: What a problem to have!

SEAN: Also from J-Novel Club: Black Summoner 18, Earl and Fairy 7, Goodbye, Overtime! This Reincarnated Villainess Is Living for Her New Big Brother 2, Knight’s & Magic 4, Rebuild World 5, the 9th Rebuild World manga, and Tearmoon Empire 13.

Kodansha Manga has a debut, but it’s a box set. Fire Force has its first six volumes in a box.

Also in print from Kodansha: Am I Actually the Strongest? 7, Blue Lock 14, The Blue Wolves of Mibu 3, Don’t Toy with Me, Miss Nagatoro 17, Go! Go! Loser Ranger! 11, In/Spectre 20, Kaina of the Great Snow Sea 2, and Shangri-La Frontier 13.

And for digital we see The Café Terrace and Its Goddesses 14, Elegant Yokai Apartment Life 28, Gamaran: Shura 23, Koigakubo-kun Stole My First Time 7, and The World is Dancing 6 (the final volume).

One Peace Books has a 3rd volume of Tales of the Tendo Family.

MICHELLE: Another title that is getting away from me.

ASH: I enjoyed the debut volume; I really should read more.

SEAN: Seven Seas debuts. Cat Companions Maruru and Hachi (Tsureneko – Maruru to Hachi) is a seinen title from Comic Days. A spoiled family cat gets lost one day, and meets up with a stray who doesn’t need anyone. Can the two become pals? Or… more than pals? (No, just pals. This is a freaking cat manga.)

ASH: Lol! I’m game for some cat manga. Look how cute they are together!

SEAN: Someone’s Girlfriend (Aitsu no Kanojo) is a dark romance from Sunday Web Every about a boy who falls in love with his best friend’s girlfriend… only to find that she’s now coming on to him.

ASH: Uh-oh.

SEAN: Also from Seven Seas: Backstabbed in a Backwater Dungeon: My Party Tried to Kill Me, But Thanks to an Infinite Gacha I Got LVL 9999 Friends and Am Out For Revenge 6, Dai Dark 7, Gravitation: Collector’s Edition 2, Easygoing Territory Defense by the Optimistic Lord: Production Magic Turns a Nameless Village into the Strongest Fortified City 3, I Married My Female Friend 3, Monster Guild: The Dark Lord’s (No-Good) Comeback! 7, Precarious Woman Executive Miss Black General 10, and Tokyo Revengers 23-24.

Tokyopop has A Gentle Noble’s Vacation Recommendation 8 and I Was Reincarnated as the Villainess in an Otome Game but the Boys Love Me Anyway! 5.

Viz has a novel based on the mobile game, with art by the Black Butler artist. Disney Twisted-Wonderland: Rose-Red Tyrant makes us all nostalgic for last decade, when you could not read a single Manga the Week of without one or two Alice titles.

And for fans of bulky hardcovers, we see My Neighbor Totoro Film Comic: All-in-One Edition, 584 pages of pure, undiluted Totoro.

And we get Spy x Family: The Official Anime Guide—Mission Report: 220409-0625, which is a guide to the first 12 episodes of the super popular series.

They also have How Do We Relationship? 11.

ASH: I really need to get caught up with this series; I really enjoyed the early volumes.

SEAN: Lastly, Yen Press still has some stuff. Including some stuff I told you about last time, because they split the digital and print titles. I’ll skip repeating myself.

Riviere and the Land of Prayer (Inori no Kuni wo Lilliere – Majo no Tabitabi Gaiden) is a manga adaptation of the light novel, which Yen also has. It’s a spinoff of Wandering Witch as well. A shop assistant learns about curses and prayers from a mysterious shop owner.

Also from Yen: Apparently, Disillusioned Adventurers Will Save the World 6, Bocchi the Rock! 4, CLAMP Premium Collection Tokyo Babylon 4, The Dark History of the Reincarnated Villainess: Short Story Collection, The Do-Over Damsel Conquers the Dragon Emperor 4, Gahi-chan! 3, Glitch 4 (the final volume), Handyman Saitou in Another World 5, Higurashi When They Cry: MEGURI 3, Let This Grieving Soul Retire 8, Maiden of the Needle 4, Monthly in the Garden with My Landlord 3, [Oshi No Ko] 7, A Reincarnated Witch Spells Doom 5, So What’s Wrong with Getting Reborn as a Goblin? 6, and The World’s Finest Assassin Gets Reincarnated in Another World as an Aristocrat 6.

MICHELLE: Definitely gotta read Glitch. I enjoyed Lost Lad London by the same creator so much.

ANNA: Oh, this is on my radar now then!

SEAN: This is a big week given that it’s AFTER a Yen Week. Are Yen Weeks a thing of the past?

Filed Under: FEATURES, manga the week of

Pick of the Week: Calling it Mystery Again

August 19, 2024 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Katherine Dacey, Ash Brown and Anna N Leave a Comment

SEAN: My pick this week is the final manga volume of Bakemonogatari. Starting off as an impossible attempt to have a manga version live up to NISIOISIN’s prose and SHAFT’s anime style, the author and Oh!Great managed to make a unique story that, especially in the last half of the series, carved out its own path, trying to show the fates of almost everyone in the series (it would be very hard to show all of Nadeko’s fate, can’t blame it there) since it can’t go on for 40 more books. Oh, and kept it absolutely filled with blatant fanservice. I really loved this series.

MICHELLE: Of course I am happy about Don’t Call It Mystery, but the most intriguing release this week is Even If There’s No Rainbow Tomorrow. The retro vibes of its cover are lovely, too.

KATE: I’m torn between two titles this week: The Summer Hikaru Died, an atmospheric blend of body horror, BL, and fantasy with fabulous artwork, and Don’t Call It a Mystery, a series that defies easy description, but reminds me a little of Columbo (with better hair).

ASH: All excellent choices, for sure! (As well as some excellent descriptions.) I would be remiss if I didn’t at least mention Oba Electroplating Factory since I had somehow forgot about it until my comic shop let me know it was in my box to pick up. But as for this week’s debuts, I’m most intrigued by the prospect of reading Hell Is Dark with No Flowers. A horror novel series featuring yokai? Yup, that one has my name on it.

ANNA: I’m going to make Don’t Call It Mystery my pick, in the hope that will prompt me to get caught up on it!

Filed Under: PICK OF THE WEEK

Manga the Week of 8/21/24

August 15, 2024 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Ash Brown and Anna N Leave a Comment

SEAN: Next week is Anime NYC and also Yen Press week. Yikes!

ASH: Here we go!

SEAN: Several debuts for Yen On. Hell Is Dark with No Flowers (Jigoku Kura Yami Hana mo Naki), a horror title about a boy who can see monsters getting room and board in exchange for sending those possessed by yokai… to Hell!

ASH: Well, now, that sounds exactly like something I would read.

ANNA: That does sound charming.

SEAN: My First Love’s Kiss (Watashi no Hatsukoi Aite ga Kiss Shiteta) is a yuri light novel series from the creator of Adachi and Shimamura. Our heroine is annoyed when her classmate and her mother are now living with them. It doesn’t help that the classmate is so pretty. But where does she go at night?

ASH: Glad to see more yuri novels being licensed.

SEAN: Re:ZERO -Starting Life in Another World- Short Story Collection is what it sounds. This collection takes place after Vol. 3 of the main series, and also is the introduction of a character we were supposed to already know from the 5th arc. The dangers of licensing short story collections.

Sword Art Online Alternative Clover’s Regret is the second in the Alternative series, now that we’ve caught up with Gun Gale Online. This series follows the adventures of the Sleeping Knights in a Japanese-themed game.

Also from Yen On: Alya Sometimes Hides Her Feelings in Russian 5, Blade & Bastard 2 (a JN-C print release), The Ephemeral Scenes of Setsuna’s Journey 4, Hell Mode 5 (a JN-C print release), The Hero Laughs While Walking the Path of Vengeance a Second Time 7, High School DxD 14, I Kept Pressing the 100-Million-Year Button and Came Out on Top 8, Is It Wrong to Try to Pick Up Girls in a Dungeon? 19, King’s Proposal 5, Magical Girl Raising Project 18 (the final volume), The Misfit of Demon King Academy 4-1 (a J-NC print release), My Happy Marriage 7, My Instant Death Ability Is So Overpowered, No One in This Other World Stands a Chance Against Me! 5 (a JN-C print release), Rascal Does Not Dream of Santa Claus (the 13th in the series), Riviere and the Land of Prayer 2, Sabikui Bisco 8, Sentenced to Be a Hero 3, That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime 19, and Your Forma 6.

ASH: So many books.

SEAN: As for Yen Press, they also have debuts. The Hachioji Specialty: Tengu’s Love (Hachiouji Meibutsu Tengu no Koi) is a shoujo title from Asuka. A young man returns to his home village… where he has to marry a tengu demon he met as a child! He doesn’t want this, but she won’t let that stop her.

ASH: Interesting, that plot is more commonly encountered the other way around.

ANNA: Hmmmm.

SEAN: In Another World, My Sister Stole My Name (Isekai de Ane ni Namae wo Ubawaremashita) is a shoujo title from Flos Comic. A girl has been communicating with a boy from another world via a magic hand mirror… then her older sister and the mirror disappear. Now her sister has stolen her life in another world?

ASH: Uh-oh!

SEAN: The Magical Girl and the Evil Lieutenant Used to Be Archenemies (Katsute Mahou Shoujo to Aku wa Tekitai Shite Ita) is an omnibus containing the entire series before the author’s unfortunate death. She also wrote Inu x Buku SS, and this is getting an anime. It ran in Gangan Joker, and is another one of those “good guy and bad guy fall in love” series.

Rejected by the Hero’s Party, a Princess Decided to Live a Quiet Life in the Countryside (Shin no Nakama ni Narenakatta Ohime-sama wa, Henkyou de Slow Life Suru Koto ni Shimashita) is a spinoff of Banished from the Hero’s Party, showing what Rit was up to between the first time she met Red/Gideon and the second. It runs in Shonen Ace Plus.

ASH: I highly recommend the quiet countryside life when dealing with rejection. Or anytime, really.

SEAN: Strategic Lovers is a shonen title from (oh dear) Dragon Age. The son of a wealthy businessman and his mistress, our hero didn’t think he was in the line of succession… but he is! Now he’s been kidnapped by young women, all of whom are after his body! This is basically softcore porn, for that sort of audience.

ASH: It does have that vibe, doesn’t it.

SEAN: Also from Yen Press: Breasts Are My Favorite Things in the World! 8 (the final volume), Bungo Stray Dogs 24, Cheeky Brat 11, Friday at the Atelier 2, I Got a Cheat Skill in Another World and Became Unrivaled in the Real World, Too 5, I Kept Pressing the 100-Million-Year Button and Came Out on Top 6, The Illustrated Guide to Monster Girls 4 (the final volume), My Youth Romantic Comedy Is Wrong, As I Expected @ comic 22 (the final volume), She Likes Gays, but Not Me 2, The Summer Hikaru Died 4, The Tiger Won’t Eat the Dragon Yet 2, and Witch Life in a Micro Room 3.

ASH: The Summer Hikaru Died is definitely the one that interests me the most out of that batch.

SEAN: Onward. Debuting from Viz this week is I Wanna Do Bad Things with You (Kimi to Warui Koto ga Shitai), a romcom from Shonen Sunday. A girl offers to help a jealous younger brother derail his perfect older brother’s student council campaign. But is he just a “villain”?

Also from Viz: Hirasuyumi 2, Jujutsu Kaisen 23, Magilumiere Magical Girls Inc. 3, Mission: Yozakura Family 12, The Way of the Househusband 12, and Zom 100: Bucket List of the Dead 15.

ASH: Oops, I’ve got some The Way of the Househusband catching up to do.

ANNA: Me too!

SEAN: Steamship has a 3rd volume of Revenge: Mrs. Wrong.

From Square Enix we get Mr. Villain’s Day Off 5 and Ragna Crimson 13.

Seven Seas has two debuts. Hate Me, but Let Me Stay (Kiraide Isasete) is a BL title from Be x Boy Omegaverse. Yes, that’s now an entire magazine. I… look, it’s A/B/O. You know what the premise will be, I don’t need to summarize it.

And Too Many Losing Heroines! (Make Heroine ga Oosugiru!) is the manga version of the light novel we’ve talked about, and runs in Ura Sunday.

Also from Seven Seas: 365 Days to the Wedding 4, Black Night Parade 4, Cat on the Hero’s Lap 3, Don’t Call it Mystery 9-10, How NOT to Summon a Demon Lord 19, My Girlfriend’s Child 5, Orb: On the Movements of the Earth 5-6, A White Rose in Bloom 3, and You Like Me, Not My Daughter?! 4.

MICHELLE: I’ll never not cheer for Yumi Tamura!

ASH: Ditto!

ANNA: Yes, although I’m so far behind!

SEAN: One Peace Books has the 5th and final volume of It Takes Two Tomorrow, Too.

KUMA gives us Even if There’s No Rainbow Tomorrow (Ashita Niji ga Denakute mo), a one-shot title from On Blue. An online romance between a drag queen and a sleepy salaryman.

MICHELLE: This looks really interesting!

ASH: I am likewise intrigued.

SEAN: The print debut from Kodansha Manga is Kusunoki’s Flunking Her High School Glow-Up (Kusunoki-san wa Koukou Debut ni Shippai shite Iru), a josei title from Comic Pool. A new high school boy is determined to be rid of his horrible middle school life and remake himself. Unfortunately, one classmate from his middle school knows the real him… and she’s trying to do the same thing! For those who enjoy seeing introverts attempt to change.

ASH: Hooray for josei!

ANNA: Indeed!

SEAN: Also in print: Bakemonogatari 22 (the final volume), I Was Reincarnated as the 7th Prince so I Can Take My Time Perfecting My Magical Ability 13, Ogami-san Can’t Keep It In 6, and Welcome Back, Alice 7 (the final volume).

And digitally we get Issak 9, Medalist 10, and WIND BREAKER 16.

No new volumes for J-Novel Club, as they had so many last time. But we do see The Crown of Rutile Quartz 2, Duchess in the Attic manga volume 3, The Frontier Lord Begins with Zero Subjects manga volume 5, The Invincible Little Lady manga volume 4, Private Tutor to the Duke’s Daughter 13, Sweet Reincarnation 10, Taking My Reincarnation One Step at a Time: No One Told Me There Would Be Monsters! 6, and VTuber Legend: How I Went Viral after Forgetting to Turn Off My Stream 7.

Ghost Ship debuts an omnibus of a previously released title with Do You Like Big Girls? 1-2. There’s also the 7th and final volume of JK Haru is a Sex Worker in Another World. And in mature Seven Seas stuff, we get The Husky and His White Cat Shizun: Erha He Ta De Bai Mao Shizun 6.

Apologies to Drawn & Quarterly, who I missed in last week’s list. They’ve got another Yoshihara Tsuge title, Oba Electroplating Factory (Nejishiki), a collection of short stories from Garo.

ASH: I just picked up my copy!

SEAN: Airship, in print, has Free Life Fantasy Online: Immortal Princess 7 and I’m the Evil Lord of an Intergalactic Empire! 7.

And digitally we see a one-shot debut, An Autumn in Amber, a Zero-Second Journey (Kohaku no Aki, 0-byō no Tabi), another book by Mei Hachimoku, Seven Seas’ resident “bittersweet sci-fi teen romance” author. Not sure if this is bittersweet, but there’s sci-fi and teens. A boy who hates being touched and a snarky delinquent girl find time has stopped for everyone but them.

And there’s also Kuma Kuma Kuma Bear 19.

I’m so tired. So very, very tired after writing all that.

ASH: You’ve more than earned you rest. Thank you for your service.

Filed Under: FEATURES, manga the week of

Pick of the Week: The Summer Hikaru Is Published

August 12, 2024 by Michelle Smith, Sean Gaffney, Anna N, Ash Brown and Katherine Dacey 1 Comment

MICHELLE: Kaze Hikaru! I am tempted to say “Enough said,” but there’s also the third and final volume of Guardian that’s very high on my list.

SEAN: Yeah, we only get to do this once a year, so it’s definitely Kaze Hikaru this week. Though I am also interested in <Guardian.

ANNA: Kaze Hikaru, no question!

ASH: As far as debuts go, I find The Concierge at Hokkyoku Department Store is the one that intrigues me the most. But, yeah, I shall also join in with a hearty Kaze Hikaru!

KATE: Do I even need to say it? Kaze Hikaru! The release schedule is frustrating, but I’m grateful that VIZ has stayed the course with this lovely, lively, and sometimes heartbreaking series.

Filed Under: PICK OF THE WEEK

Manga the Week of 8/14/24

August 8, 2024 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Ash Brown and Anna N Leave a Comment

SEAN: Typing out Manga the Week of in the short break between killer thunderstorms.

ASH: There have been a few, haven’t there?

SEAN: Debuting in print for Airship is Too Many Losing Heroines! (Make Heroine ga Oosugiru!), whose anime is currently getting a very large animation budget. It’s a romcom about (sigh) a plain, boring guy who suddenly finds that all the hot, popular girls in his class are confessing to the guys they like… and being shot down! What’s going on here?

ASH: Only time will tell, I’m sure.

SEAN: Also in print: Reincarnated as a Dragon Hatchling 7, Trapped in a Dating Sim: The World of Otome Games is Tough for Mobs 12, and The Weakest Tamer Began a Journey to Pick Up Trash 7.

And for early digital we see 7th Time Loop: The Villainess Enjoys a Carefree Life Married to Her Worst Enemy! 6 and There’s No Freaking Way I’ll be Your Lover! Unless… 5.

Denpa Books has a 5th omnibus of Nana & Kaoru.

From Ghost Ship, 2.5 Dimensional Seduction 11 and Inside the Tentacle Cave 3. And, in Mature Seven Seas titles, we get Killing Stalking: Deluxe Edition 7.

ASH: I really need to get around to giving Killing Stalking a try.

SEAN: There’s a GIANT PILE of J-Novel Club debuts for next week, all light novels. We’ll start with The Fake Hero Crashes the Party (Kono Hi, “Itsuwari no Yūsha” dearu Ore wa “Shin no Yūsha” dearu Kare wo Party Kara Tsuihōshita) stars two boyhood friends, one of whom is the hero… and one of whom is, unbeknownst to anyone else, “Fake Hero”. After the obligatory banishing from the hero’s party, can this “bad guy” find a way to do good?

The Hero and the Sage, Reincarnated and Engaged (Eiyū to Kenja no Tenseikon) stars two soldiers who fought for years for their respective nations, but the rivalry was never resolved as one passed away. Now they’re reincarnated, and really want to fight to resolve their rivalry! Clearly, the best way to do that is to get engaged.

The Poison King: Now that I’ve Gained Ultimate Power, the Bewitching Beauties in My Harem Can’t Get Enough of Me (Doku no Ō: Saikyō no Chikara ni Kakusei shita Ore wa Biki-tachi wo Shitagae, Hatsujō Harem no Ō to Naru). A boy inherits a curse from his late mother, which means everyone except one loyal maid despises him. When a doctor examines him and shows him how to overcome the curse, he discovers his other true power: get every woman he knows to want to have sex with him. This is one of THOSE books.

ASH: There have been a few, haven’t there?

SEAN: The Reincarnation of the Strongest Exorcist in Another World (Saikyō Onmyōji no Isekai Tenseiki) is… um,. honestly, the title should tell you exactly what’s going to happen. Reincarnated as a noble, supposedly no magic, but he has SORCERY, which is so much more powerful. I bet he goes to a magic academy too.

The Royal Hostage Has Vanished: The Black Wolf Knight Yearns for the Persecuted Princess (Hitojichi Hime ga, Shōsoku wo Tatta. Kuro Ōkami no Kishi wa Rinkoku no Shiitagerareta Hime wo Zenryoku de Aishimasu) is the one J-Novel Heart title in this list. A knight goes to retrieve a princess offered up as war reparations, only to find she’s been abused most of her life, and is also now dead. Stunned, he returns home… to find a mysterious young woman who looks a lot like this princess.

ASH: Unsurprisingly, it’s the Heart title that interests me the most out of those.

ANNA: yeah.

SEAN: There’s also a pile of ongoing titles. We see Butareba -The Story of a Man Turned into a Pig- manga volume 3, DUNGEON DIVE: Aim for the Deepest Level 8, Enough with This Slow Life! I Was Reincarnated as a High Elf and Now I’m Bored 7, The Faraway Paladin manga volume 12, Goodbye, Overtime! This Reincarnated Villainess Is Living for Her New Big Brother manga volume 2, Holmes of Kyoto 19, The Invincible Summoner Who Crawled Up from Level 1: Wrecking Reincarnators with My Hidden Dungeon 2, Management of a Novice Alchemist 2, Now I’m a Demon Lord! Happily Ever After with Monster Girls in My Dungeon manga volume 7, Peddler in Another World: I Can Go Back to My World Whenever I Want! 8, and A Surprisingly Happy Engagement for the Slime Duke and the Fallen Noble Lady 2 (the final volume).

ASH: That list really does keep going.

SEAN: Kodansha has no print debuts, but we do see The Fable Omnibus 3, Gazing at the Star Next Door 3, The Iceblade Sorcerer Shall Rule the World 10, Medaka Kuroiwa is Impervious to My Charms 8, Pass the Monster Meat, Milady! 5, Quality Assurance in Another World 9, Saving 80,000 Gold in Another World for My Retirement 8, The Seven Deadly Sins: Four Knights of the Apocalypse 13, Sketchy 3, Wandance 10, Welcome to Demon School! Iruma-kun 9, and Wistoria: Wand and Sword 8.

MICHELLE: Insert obligatory remorse for not yet having read Iruma-kun.

ASH: It feels like it’s been a while since we’ve seen so much print from Kodansha all at once.

SEAN: The digital debut is That Beauty Is a Tramp (Sono Bijin (Otoko) Fushidara ni Tsuki), a josei title from Comic Tint. A woman traumatized by a past incident wants a boyfriend, but any man who touches her causes her to reject them. Then she meets an androgynous model. Can he help her out? This is from the author of Such a Treacherous Piano Sonata.

Also digital: Gang King 20, Giant Killing 44, I Have a Crush at Work 5, Medaka Kuroiwa is Impervious to My Charms 13, and Tokyo Tarareba Girls Returns 2 2.

One Peace Books has Usotoki Rhetoric 8.

MICHELLE: I need to get back on this series.

ASH: I’ve been enjoying it!

SEAN: Seven Seas has, in their danmei line, the 3rd and final volume of Guardian: Zhen Hun. There’s also a special edition with posters, stickers, etc.

MICHELLE: Over already?! Waah.

SEAN: Two debuts from Seven Seas. The Concierge at Hokkyoku Department Store (Hokkyoku Hyakkaten no Concierge-san), a seinen manga from Bic Comic Zoukan. A new employee finds that her department store caters to talking animals!

ASH: This looks like it could be fun.

ANNA: Sounds amusing!

SEAN: Killer Shark in Another World (Isekai Kuimetsu no Same) is a seinen title from Comic Valkyrie. A young girl is a terrible summoner who everyone mocks… till she summons a monster that can transform into B-movie sharks. This is one of THOSE books, though in a different way than The Poison King.

Also from Seven Seas: CANDY AND CIGARETTES 9, Classroom of the Elite 11, Failure Frame: I Became the Strongest and Annihilated Everything With Low-Level Spells 8, How Heavy are the Dumbbells You Lift? 15, Life with an Ordinary Guy Who Reincarnated into a Total Fantasy Knockout 4, Mushoku Tensei: Jobless Reincarnation 19, My Cat is Such a Weirdo 4, and Yokai Cats 8.

Square Enix Books has The Girl I Like Forgot Her Glasses 11, The Ice Guy and the Cool Girl 6, and My Isekai Life: I Gained a Second Character Class and Became the Strongest Sage in the World! 14.

ANNA: I need to read more Ice Guy and Cool Girl.

SEAN: Steamship has a manga debut. Alpha Wolfgirl x Omega Wolfboy (Oukami α-san to Oukami Ω-kun) is a josei title from Jour that asks “what if A/B/O but het?”.

ASH: Hmmm.

ANNA: I dunno.

SEAN: SuBLime has Don’t Be Cruel: plus+ 3 and Given 9 (the final volume).

ASH: Given is another one I’ve been enjoying but need to catch up on.

ANNA: Same!

SEAN: Udon Entertainment has a debut. More than a Married Couple, but Not Lovers (Fuufu Ijou, Koibito Miman) is a seinen series in Young Ace. A school forces its students to do mandatory couples training, where they have to prove – under surveillance – they can live with another person. But our hero’s other person… is a gyaru! Horrors! This is an omnibus of the first 2 volumes.

ASH: Oh, my!

SEAN: Debuting from Viz is Deadpool: Samurai—The Official Coloring Book. It is what it says.

They’ve also got Akane-banashi 7, Demon Slayer: Kimetsu Academy 3, I Want to End This Love Game 3, Kaze Hikaru 32, My Hero Academia: Team-Up Missions 5, Pokémon: Sword & Shield 10, Sakura, Saku 4, Sleepy Princess in the Demon Castle 25, Splatoon 3: Splatlands 2, and Star Wars: The High Republic: Edge of Balance 3.

MICHELLE: It’s time for the annual rejoicing about Kaze Hikaru!

ASH: Huzzah!

ANNA: Yay!!!!

SEAN: And Yen Press has three J-Novel Club titles for print. We get Ascendance of a Bookworm Part 3 Volume 2 (that’s the manga), By the Grace of the Gods 11, and Seirei Gensouki: Spirit Chronicles 11.

So it turns out the cat titles are here, not in the last Manga the Week of. Rejoice!

ASH: Woo!

Filed Under: FEATURES, manga the week of

Pick of the Week: Farewell, Alpha

August 5, 2024 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Katherine Dacey, Ash Brown and Anna N Leave a Comment

SEAN: My pick this week is the final volume of Yokohama Kaidachi Kikou, a series that I never thought would get licensed and I am delighted that it did.

MICHELLE: I’ve been playing a lot of Monster of the Week lately, so a story about a supernatural consultant who’s investigating a creepy house with a creepy room is right up my street. The Strange House for me!

KATE: I second Sean’s pick: Yokohama Kaidachi Kikou was on my radar for YEARS before it was licensed, and it’s better than I’d hope it would be. Like Station Eleven, this is a story about a post-apocalyptic world where the few survivors find meaning by hanging on to small but important rituals. I know I’m making it sound like a major downer, but Yokohama Kaidachi Kikou isn’t the least bit depressing; if anything, I find each new volume makes me feel just a little more hopeful about the future.

ASH: Yokohama Kaidachi Kikou is absolutely a solid choice. And now that the series has been fully released, I plan on spending some time with it. But I’m also going to second Michelle’s pick; The Strange House sounds like something I should be reading, too.

ANNA: I’m convinced to give Yokohama Kaidachi Kikou a try!

Filed Under: PICK OF THE WEEK

Bookshelf Briefs 8/3/24

August 3, 2024 by Sean Gaffney and Michelle Smith Leave a Comment

Adults’ Picture Book: New Edition, Vol. 2 | By Kei Itoi | Yen Press – This continues to be really well-written provided that you can deal with awkward introverts who don’t like talking trying to raise a ball of fun who is nevertheless far more clever than her father wants her to be. Now married, Fusako is trying to figure out what that means… though before she does that, she might want to invest in a GPS so she doesn’t walk over an hour to get home after work. Meanwhile, Kudou’s colleagues bring him gifts (that he doesn’t want) and also muse on his sexuality, which is still very ambiguous. He states he’s not gay, but it’s pretty clear he was in love with Jinno. The premise of this manga seems to be defining “normal”… or more accurately, asking why people have to try really hard to be normal at all. Fascinating. – Sean Gaffney

Bocchi the Rock!, Vol. 3 | By Aki Hamazi | Yen Press – Make no mistake, Bocchi is the main reason to read this series, but I do appreciate that the other three girls in the main cast are not just there to react to her. They’ve each got their own issues. Kita worries her voice isn’t conveying the song as well as it could, worries that don’t go away when the singer from a rival band confirms it for her. Nijika is the leader of the band, so of course wants it to go far, even if that means playing at bad venues and having to face up to the fact that she’s a drummer and can’t do a cool pose. Even Ryo gets stuff to do, though I admit of the four leads hers is the one that most often comes down to “the stoic but weird one” most often. As for Bocchi herself, she’s still a mess, but far less than volume one. She’s coming along. – Sean Gaffney

Captain Momo’s Secret Base, Vol. 1 | By Kenji Tsuruta | Dark Horse – It’s 3019 CE and Captain Momo and her first officer, a tuxedo cat named Grandpa John, are escorting a space freighter on a years-long journey. This manga chronicles their daily adventures, by which I mean the distinct lack of same. These include using the meal replicator to create a toy mouse for Grandpa John, napping, and dealing with massive piles of stuff everywhere. She’s also naked the whole time. It’s not salacious, unless you count the time she flashes her coworker, but it’s definitely inescapable. Towards the end, somewhat of a plot develops, in that Momo currently doesn’t have enough energy reserves to complete her journey successfully, and must find a way to make up the deficit. I’m just not sure I’m interested enough to see how that turns out for her. – Michelle Smith

Chasing Spica, Vol. 1 | By Chihiro Orihi | Seven Seas – I was looking at comments about this manga, and I saw someone asking whether it was really OK to be rooting for the blackmailer in this series? Well, are we supposed to? Honestly, both leads are damaged in some way, shape or form. The blackmailer, Serika, is the “protagonist” mostly as the story comes from her perspective in this book, and it’s her own struggles that kickstart the plot. That said, I can’t deny that I’m more interested in Reiko, who is seemingly the prim and proper opposite to Serika but in reality is something much more complex, and grounded in apparent past family trauma. Plus we get “I’m good at something too. Sex.”, which is one of those over-the-top lines that makes me hope this eventually sees an anime. I was intrigued. I’ll read more. – Sean Gaffney

I Can’t Say No to the Lonely Girl, Vol. 2 | By Kashikaze| Kodansha Manga – It’s always tricky when two girls are in love but one of them isn’t quite aware that’s what this is. Sora definitely knows what this is—she’s been in love with Ayaka from the moment she first saw her. Unfortunately, not only does Ayaka not remember that, but she’s also perhaps unaware of her own feelings—since she sees her relationship with Sora as being based around the request from the teacher (and explaining about her perfect older brother helps explain more why she took it), the burgeoning feelings inside her can’t be romantic—they’ve got to be the TRUE friendship that exists beyond the commodity that they had before! If this seems frustrating, welcome to yuri manga, but it’s cute and they’re great kids. They’ll work it out. – Sean Gaffney

My Hero Academia, Vol. 38 | By Kohei Horikoshi | Viz Media – A definite step up from the last volume, here we see the heroes starting to have a comeback. There is a bit of shonen eye-rolling to get through, as EVERYONE has to come back for one last appearance to help out. This includes Lady Nagant, whom we last saw exploded but with her death unconfirmed, sniping All for One despite her massive wounds. It also includes the cast of Shiketesu, leading to the best callback of the series, where Camie does her “shojo manga” duplicate of Hawks, which manages to fool AFO enough for the real, injured Hawks to get away. And yes, that means it’s also the chapter with the translated footnotes that a very annoying fandom thought were made up by the translator. No, you missed the joke. Try again, folks. – Sean Gaffney

Queen’s Quality, Vol. 19 | By Kyousuke Motomi | Viz Media – The danger of long-running suspense series, especially ones with a supernatural bent like QueQua, is that there needs to be escalation to keep the reader interested. Shonen does this too, of course, but there it’s bigger and stronger villains, whereas here it’s bigger and more personal villains. Fumi has struggled with past memories for the entirety of the series, even back when it was QQ Sweeper, and the revelations that come up here are less “oh my God, we had no idea” and more “oh my God, she’s going to be depressed even more now.” But Fumi is made of sterner stuff (well, she is in the hospital—again—in this book) and is prepared, if necessary, to make this fight even more personal than it’s already been. Good stuff. – Sean Gaffney

Sister and Giant: A Young Lady Is Reborn in Another World, Vol. 1 | By Be-Con | Yen Press – “Sister” is used here in the Maria-sama Ga Miteru vein—indeed, they seem to explicitly have the same uniforms. Sadly, the sisterly relationship we see seems to have gone sour, in a lethal way—not a truck, but a train. The “Giant,” however, is very real, a young woman who is belittled and abandoned by everyone else in her tribe, but finds this isekai’d girl with no powers (she explicitly rejected them) is her savior. Together the two of them struggle to do adventuring jobs, fight off evil rapists from (of course) the Church, and look for those who abandoned them. Unfortunately, the other girl who got hit by the train was not proud enough to reject cool powers, and I think that might come back to bite her. A good take on isekai. – Sean Gaffney

Snow White with the Red Hair, Vol. 26 | By Sorata Akiduki | Viz Media – It’s been a YEAR since the last volume, and I have, of course, forgotten everything. My last review notes Ryu’s character growth, and now we see why—he’s staying behind while Shirayuki moves on, and the new arc, whatever it may be, begins in earnest. At least she has Zen with her for now. We also get to see more of Kiki and Hisame, and I think the reader may finally be coming to terms with the fact that, now that they’ve both grown up a lot, they’re a very good couple. So are Shirayuki and Zen, but that has to advance at a snail’s pace due to the nature of this manga, and it doesn’t help that it’s on a yearly schedule in Japan now as well, so we’re going to wait just as long for the next book. I’ll always be buying it, though. – Sean Gaffney

Teasing Master Takagi-san, Vol. 19 | By Soichiro Yamamoto | Yen Press – The only teasing going on here is teasing the reader, as we get a chapter where newlyweds Takagi and Nishikata (yes, another flashforward) resolve to use each other’s first names… but WE don’t hear what they are. Other than that, this is the penultimate volume of the series, so it’s setting up for the ending… except I suspect the ending will be pretty vague, so instead it’s sort of meandering along with more heartwarming than funny, including the scene where Takagi gets sick and he visits her home, and more scenes showing that Nishikata and Takagi are basically dating, and would be making out every day if he could work up the nerve. (He can’t even touch her back without having a breakdown.) The next one’s the last, should be fun. – Sean Gaffney

This Monster Wants to Eat Me, Vol. 1 | By Sai Naekawa | Yen Press – I read this suspecting it would be a bit depressing, and it is a bit, but the overly of mystery and horror helps to distract you. Hinako lives alone in a seaside town, and dwells on her parents and brother, who were killed at some point in the past. As a word of warning, she pretty much as suicidal thoughts throughout this volume, and I don’t see that changing. She ends up meeting a girl who turns out to be a mermaid, who wants to eat Hinako… but not yet, as she’s not tasty enough. The implication seems to be Hinako is too depressed to taste good, so as metaphors go it’s not bad. I’m most intrigued by Hinako’s friend Miko, who is her bestest bestest friend and does not like this new girl (the mermaid transfers in) at all. This is a riveting title. – Sean Gaffney

Filed Under: Bookshelf Briefs

Manga the Week of 8/7/24

August 1, 2024 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Ash Brown and Anna N Leave a Comment

SEAN: The Dog Days and Cat Manga of August are here.

ASH: How? How is it August already??

MICHELLE: I truly do not know.

SEAN: No debuts for Viz Media, but we do see Blue Exorcist 29, Boruto: Naruto Next Generations 20 (the final volume, though the continuation to this is still going), The Elusive Samurai 12, In the Name of the Mermaid Princess 3, My Special One 7, Neighborhood Story 3, Rainbow Days 11, Spy x Family 12, and You and I Are Polar Opposites 2.

MICHELLE: I’ve really gotta read Neighborhood Story.

ASH: I’ve been collecting them, but I really need to read them at some point, too.

ANNA: I read the first volume! I’m glad it is coming out in English.

SEAN: Tokyopop has the 4th and final volume of Since I Could Die Tomorrow.

And Square Enix Manga has Daemons of the Shadow Realm 5.

Debuting from Seven Seas next week is The Strange House (Hen na Ie), a horror/mystery manga based on a novel, that runs in Ichijinsha’s Comic HOWL. A supernatural consultant runs up against a creepy house with a very creepy room.

MICHELLE: Ooooh.

ASH: I’m very curious about this one.

ANNA: Sounds interesting!

SEAN: A spinoff also debuts, Tokyo Revengers: A Letter from Keisuke Baji (Tokyo Revengers – Baji Keisuke kara no Tegami). This Magazine pocket title is, I’m going to guess, about one of the supporting cast of the main series.

On the danmei front, Seven Seas has The Disabled Tyrant’s Beloved Pet Fish: Canji Baojun De Zhangxin Yu Chong 2.

ASH: I am still very pleased by the danmei trend.

SEAN: Also from Seven Seas: Chronicles of an Aristocrat Reborn in Another World 10, Crossplay Love: Otaku x Punk 9, Kemono Jihen 12, The Knight Captain is the New Princess-to-Be 4 (the final volume), The Most Notorious “Talker” Runs the World’s Greatest Clan 7, and Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou: Deluxe Edition 5 (the final volume).

ASH: Gotta get caught up with that one, as well!

SEAN: One Peace Books has the 6th manga volume of The Death Mage.

One print debut for Kodansha Manga: Pupposites Attract (Seihantai na Watashitachi), a shoujo/josei title from Comic Pool that started as a Pixiv title. A man and a woman with opposite personalities meet when they walk their dogs… who also have opposite personalities! Will romance follow? (Hint: yes.)

MICHELLE: This title made me think it was going to be about puppet romance.

ASH: Haha! I’m sure there must be one of those out there somewhere.

ANNA: Maybe it will be on next month’s list!

SEAN: Also in print: The Fragrant Flower Blooms With Dignity 2, My Lovesick Life as a ’90s Otaku 4 (the final volume), That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime Omnibus 3, Tying the Knot with an Amagami Sister 6, and WIND BREAKER 7.

MICHELLE: I definitely want to read the ’90s Otaku manga!

SEAN: On the digital side, we see Abe-kun’s Got Me Now! 13 (the final volume), Chihayafuru 45, Life 17, and Those Snow White Notes 20.

There’s only one debut for J-Novel Club, and it’s a manga adaptation of a light novel they already had. Stuck in a Time Loop: When All Else Fails, Be a Villainess (Loop kara Nukedasenai Akuyaku Reijou wa, Akiramete Suki Katte Ikiru Koto ni Kimemashita) is a Drecomi title about a villainess who’s also looping, and who finally decides “screw it” and takes charge.

ASH: Someone has to!

SEAN: J-Novel Club also has This Art Club Has a Problem! 4, Butareba -The Story of a Man Turned into a Pig- 4, the 4th Hell Mode manga, I Parry Everything: What Do You Mean I’m the Strongest? I’m Not Even an Adventurer Yet! 6, Min-Maxing My TRPG Build in Another World 9-1, the 5th My Daughter Left the Nest and Returned an S-Rank Adventurer manga, Record of Wortenia War 25, Welcome to Japan, Ms. Elf! 9, and Zilbagias the Demon Prince: How the Seventh Prince Brought Down the Kingdom 2.

The debut from Ghost Ship is She’s the Strongest Bride, But I’m Stronger in Night Battles: A Harem Chronicle of Advancing Through Cunning Tactics (Isekai Saikyou no Yome desu ga, Yoru no Tatakai wa Ore no Hou ga Tsuyoi you desu – Chiryaku wo Ikashite Nariagaru Harem Senki), which runs in Futabasha’s Gaugau Monster. An isekai’d guy with a nerdy interest in military history is now the husband of the demon queen… and also terrific in bed, as this is a Ghost Ship series.

ASH: Well, of course.

ANNA: That’s some combo of interests and skills right there.

SEAN: Also from Ghost Ship: Might as Well Cheat: I Got Transported to Another World Where I Can Live My Wildest Dreams! 8 and World’s End Harem: Fantasia 12.

Denpa has three titles listed from retailers as coming out next week: Heavenly Delusion 7, Today’s Menu for the Emiya Family 6, and Vampeerz 5. (I suspect Emiya Family is wrong, but the other two are more likely).

ASH: Hmmm.

SEAN: And Airship gives us Classroom of the Elite: Year 2 9 in print, and She Professed Herself Pupil of the Wise Man 11 in early digital.

Hey, there was no cat manga at all. Boo! Anything else interest you?

ASH: I was waiting for the cat manga!

ANNA: Me too!

Filed Under: FEATURES, manga the week of

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 10
  • Page 11
  • Page 12
  • Page 13
  • Page 14
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 183
  • Go to Next Page »
 | Log in
Copyright © 2010 Manga Bookshelf | Powered by WordPress & the Genesis Framework