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Manga Bookshelf

Discussion, Resources, Roundtables, & Reviews

Michelle Smith

Pick of the Week: So Much Stuff

May 23, 2023 by Katherine Dacey, Michelle Smith, Sean Gaffney, Ash Brown and Anna N Leave a Comment

KATE: My pick of the week goes to Associate Professor Akira Takatsuki’s Conjecture, as it checks a number of boxes for me: supernatural elements, characters with weird but useful superpowers, and characters whose primary field of study is folklore. (I may be the only reader holding out for a manga on Charles Seeger. Just sayin’.) The story also gets high marks for having an original premise—something that seems to be in short supply lately.

MICHELLE: There are a good many things coming out next week that I’m interested in, but what I’m most looking forward to is BL murder mystery Manner of Death, because I’m always on the search for good mystery manga.

SEAN: Yeah, there’s a pile, with many things I’m reading. I could pick problematic fave Horimiya, or one by a favorite author, A Pale Moon Reverie. But I think I feel like hiding from my responsibilities in a library, so will choose The Dragon King’s Imperial Wrath: Falling in Love with the Bookish Princess of the Rat Clan.

ASH: I have definitely hid from my responsibilities in a library before, but the debut that’s really caught my attention this week is Associate Professor Akira Takatsuki’s Conjecture. I simply cannot pass up the premise of BL-adjacent folklore studies.

ANNA: I’m excited to read the second volume of Honey Lemon Soda!

Filed Under: PICK OF THE WEEK

Manga the Week of 5/24/23

May 18, 2023 by Sean Gaffney, Ash Brown, Michelle Smith and Anna N Leave a Comment

SEAN: Bad news, folks, it’s Yen Press week. Can we make it out alive?

ASH: Fingers crossed!

SEAN: We start with Yen On, who have a number of debuts. Associate Professor Akira Takatsuki’s Conjecture (Jun Kyōju Takatsuki Akira no Suisatsu) is a BL-adjacent series about a college student who can see if someone has been lying (which has left him ludicrously unpopular) and his folklore studies professor, who takes him under his wing to find out if things are really folklore or simply lies.

ASH: Oh! BL-adjacent and folklore studies? This pertains to my interests.

MICHELLE: Sounds potentially promising!

ANNA: OK, I’m also interested.

SEAN: Even If These Tears Disappear Tonight (Kon’ya, Sekai kara Kono Namida ga Kiete mo) is a sequel to Even If This Love Disappears Tonight, and is for people who like to read books and cry.

How to Win Her Heart on the Nth Try (n Kaime no Koi no Musubikata) is a one-shot. A young woman in her late 20s worries she’ll never have a romance. Then her childhood friend shows up… but she’s only ever seen him AS a friend. Can that change?

Maiden of the Needle (Hariko no Otome) is another one of those “I don’t have a skill, so I’m abused and disowned by my family and friends till I find out that really my skill is amazing” books, only since it stars a young woman it’s her “savior” (read: love interest) who rescues her.

ASH: It has such enchanting cover art! And I do really like the skill in this case.

SEAN: My Summoned Beast Is Dead (Ore no Shōkanjū, Shinderu) is a magic academy series. The poorest student there has to prove himself, and seems to do so by summoning a legendary god beast! There’s just one slight hitch – the title.

ASH: It does seem like that could be a problem.

ANNA: I’m imagining a Weekend at Bernie’s scenario.

SEAN: Also coming out: Alya Sometimes Hides Her Feelings in Russian 3, Baccano! 22, Bofuri: I Don’t Want to Get Hurt, So I’ll Max Out My Defense 9, Hazure Skill: The Guild Member with a Worthless Skill Is Actually a Legendary Assassin 5, High School DxD 11, High School Prodigies Have It Easy Even in Another World! 8, I Kept Pressing the 100-Million-Year Button and Came Out on Top 5, Reign of the Seven Spellblades 8, Sasaki and Peeps 4, and Spy Classroom 5.

ASH: So much Yen, and we’re not even done yet!

SEAN: Yen Press also has some debuts. Elden Ring: The Road to the Erdtree (Elden Ring: Ougonju e no Michi) is based on an obscure video game one or two people may know. It’s from Kadokawa’s Comic Hu, and is apparently a comedy spinoff starring a very odd hero.

Magical Girl Incident (Mahou Shoujo Jihen) is a seinen title from Young Ace. An office worker who wanted to be a hero as a kid… now finds he’s a magical girl? This is supposed to be quite funny.

MICHELLE: Hm.

SEAN: Manner of Death is a BL title from B’s-Lovey. It’s a murder mystery where a coroner suddenly finds himself being told that a death needs to be ruled a suicide… or else.

ASH: Haven’t seen too many coroners in licensed manga.

MICHELLE: You had me at “murder mystery.”

SEAN: Me and My Beast Boss (Kemono Jōshi ni Jitsuwa Mitome Rareteita Hanashi) is a shoujo title from B’s-Log Cheek. An office worker is bullied by her beastfolk colleagues because she’s human. Then the CEO calls her into his office… to make her his personal secretary?

MICHELLE: I say “Hm.” yet again.

ANNA: Haha!

SEAN: My Dear, Curse-Casting Vampiress (Boku no Noroi no Kyuuketsuki) is a Shonen Gangan series about an anti-vampire group who plan to kidnap a vampire known for her beauty that drives men mad.

Puella Magi Suzune Magica: The Complete Omnibus Edition is what it says. 3 volumes in 1.

Toilet-Bound Hanako-kun: First Stall is a boxed set collecting the first ten volumes of the manga. You can guess what the box looks like, but it’s actually quite cool.

ASH: It really is. And it’s perfect for the series.

SEAN: What This World Is Made Of (Sekai wa Are de Dekiteiru) is a news series from the creator of Monster Hunter: Flash Hunter that runs in Dengeki Maoh. Two brothers try to make money using a game app, but it has a secret…

Yokohama Station SF (Yokohama Eki SF) runs in Young Ace Up, and is a manga adaptation of the novel (also licensed by Yen). It is a science fiction manga about Yokohama Station. (Look, I can’t be funny all the time. Or even most of the time.)

ASH: Oh! I somehow missed that there was a manga adaptation!

MICHELLE: I meant to read the novel but of course never did. Maybe I’ll fare better with the manga.

SEAN: In non-debuts, we get Bofuri: I Don’t Want to Get Hurt, so I’ll Max Out My Defense 6, Bungo Stray Dogs: Dead Apple 3, Chitose Is in the Ramune Bottle 3, The Dark History of the Reincarnated Villainess 7, Delicious in Dungeon 12, The Fiancee Chosen by the Ring 4, For the Kid I Saw in My Dreams 10, Gabriel Dropout 12, The Girl I Saved on the Train Turned Out to Be My Childhood Friend 3, Hi, I’m a Witch, and My Crush Wants Me to Make a Love Potion 2, Honey Lemon Soda 2, Horimiya 16 (the final volume), I Cannot Reach You 6, I’m the Catlords’ Manservant 4 (the final volume), Kakegurui – Compulsive Gambler – 16, The Maid I Hired Recently Is Mysterious 5, Murciélago 21, Oshi no Ko 2, The Other World’s Books Depend on the Bean Counter 3, Overlord 17, Sasaki and Miyano 8, Sasaki and Peeps 2, Spy Classroom 3, To Save the World, Can You Wake Up the Morning After with a Demi-Human? 6, The White Cat’s Revenge as Plotted from the Dragon King’s Lap 4, and The World’s Finest Assassin Gets Reincarnated in Another World as an Aristocrat 5.

And that’s just Yen! Christ!

ASH: Phew! Fortunately, I saw Delicious in Dungeon in there before my eyes started glazing over.

MICHELLE: I’m looking forward on getting caught up with The Other World’s Books Depend on the Bean Counter.

ANNA: I spotted Honey Lemon Soda in that wall of text!

SEAN: From Viz Media: JoJo 6251 is the JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure artbook you know you always wanted.

ASH: It’s true. I’m so glad it’s being released here; I’ve been eyeing the Japanese edition for years.

SEAN: There’s also JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure: Part 5–Golden Wind 8, and WITCH WATCH 6 digitally, which is not JoJo’s, but is quite funny.

ASH: I really should check it out at some point.

SEAN: Tokyopop debuts My Dear Agent, which runs in LOVE xxx BOYS pixiv, so you can guess it’s BL. A cool and serious bodyguard finds that the new guy he’s supposed to train won’t stop flirting with him!

Also from Tokyopop: Her Royal Highness Seems to Be Angry 5 (the final volume).

Square Enix gives us Beauty and the Feast 8 and The Strongest Sage with the Weakest Crest 12.

Seven Seas also has some debuts. The Dragon King’s Imperial Wrath: Falling in Love with the Bookish Princess of the Rat Clan (Ryuuou Heika no Gekirin-sama ~Hon Suki Nezumi Himedesuga, Naze ka Ryuuou no Saiai ni Narimashita~) is from Zero-Sum Online, and features a princess who tries to nope out of the “who will be my bride” sweepstakes by going to the library, but to no avail.

ASH: It was worth a try!

MICHELLE: I just want to state for the record here that Ash totally made me LOL.

ANNA: I’m always in favor of going to the library.

SEAN: Even Dogs Go to Other Worlds: Life in Another World with My Beloved Hound (Isekai Teni shitara Aiken ga Saikyou ni narimashita – Silver Fenrir to Ore ga Isekai Kurashi wo Hajimetara) is a Comic Ride adaptation of the light novel (put out here by Cross Infinite World). Man and dog reincarnated. Dog is massive legendary silver wolf. Fun times.

A Story of Seven Lives (Gojussenchi no Isshou) is a done-in-one omnibus from Comic It. A stray cat tries to help some struggling humans.

There’s also CANDY AND CIGARETTES 4, Classroom of the Elite 6, How Heavy are the Dumbbells You Lift? 11, Hunting in Another World With My Elf Wife 6, Lazy Dungeon Master 4, Monster Guild: The Dark Lord’s (No-Good) Comeback! 5, Reborn as a Barrier Master 4, The Tale of the Outcasts 7, Yakuza Fiancé: Raise wa Tanin ga Ii 3, Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou: Deluxe Edition 2, and Young Ladies Don’t Play Fighting Games 5.

ASH: Some good stuff in there.

SEAN: One Peace Books has Hinamatsuri 18.

Kodansha Manga has some print titles. The debut is Tsugumi Project, which runs in Young Magazine. Another post-apocalyptic action series, a group of convicts are tasked with retrieving a weapon from a ruined city. But the city is less dead than anyone thought. (I thought this was digital-only, it’s not. The digital was 2 weeks earlier.)

And there’s As a Reincarnated Aristocrat, I’ll Use My Appraisal Skill to Rise in the World 5, Miss Miyazen would Love to Get Closer to You 4 (the final volume), A Sign of Affection 6, Toppu GP 11, Wandance 5, and Wistoria: Wand and Sword 4.

MICHELLE: I desperately need to catch up on Wandance or I’ll be too far behind to recover!

SEAN: Digitally we see Boss Bride Days 5, A Couple of Cuckoos 11, DAYS 35, Gamaran: Shura 8, Love, That’s an Understatement 2, My Home Hero 4, and Piano Duo for the Left Hand 7.

MICHELLE: Love, That’s an Understatement isn’t winning any awards for Most Original Shoujo Series Ever, but I did enjoy the first volume. Maybe I’m just inclined to like Fujimomo’s work.

ANNA: Oh, I meant to check this out!

SEAN: Three debuts for J-Novel Club. Dragon Daddy Diaries: A Girl Grows to Greatness (Totsuzen Papa ni Natta Saikyou Dragon no Kosodate Nikki: Kawaii Musume, Honobono to Ningenkai Saikyou ni Sodatsu) is the manga adaptation of the light novel J-Novel Club has already released. It runs in Comic Ride. Girl meets dragon, heartwarming ensues.

ASH: Not a bad combination.

SEAN: Make It Stop! I’m Not Strong… It’s Just My Sword! (Yametekure, Tsuyoi no wa Ore Janakute Ken nan da……!) is basically “what if Elric were just some dude who wants an easy life, and his sword only ate bad souls?”.

ANNA: This seems less angsty. Any wanna be Elric needs more angst!

SEAN: A Pale Moon Reverie (Tsuki no Shirosa o Shirite Madoromu) is the new novel from the creator of Unnamed Memory. That alone should make you purchase it sight unseen. A supernatural courtesan meets a shadeslayer in the streets of a very special town.

ASH: I am intrigued.

SEAN: We also get the 9th manga volume of An Archdemon’s Dilemma: How to Love Your Elf Bride, the 2nd Karate Master Isekai, Maddrax 6, and Making Magic: The Sweet Life of a Witch Who Knows an Infinite MP Loophole 3.

Ghost Ship has a 5th volume of Ero Ninja Scrolls.

And Airship has print for The Haunted Bookstore – Gateway to a Parallel Universe 5, How a Realist Hero Rebuilt the Kingdom 16, and The World’s Fastest Level Up 3.

And for early digital we see The Saint’s Magic Power is Omnipotent 8 and Trapped in a Dating Sim: The World of Otome Games is Tough for Mobs 10.

Oh man, look! The Manga Bookshelf team all fell asleep trying to get through this list! See what you’ve done, Yen?

Filed Under: FEATURES, manga the week of

Pick of the Week: Gatherings, Games and Biases

May 15, 2023 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Katherine Dacey, Anna N and Ash Brown Leave a Comment

SEAN: I used to obsessively follow Hana to Yume and LaLa titles back in the days when Tokyopop still existed, and as such I’m a sucker for my pick this week, Last Game. I hope it has messy, overcluttered art. Such nostalgia.

MICHELLE: Oh, man, and with teeny tiny asides in every panel! I will check out Last Game, but I think I’ll officially pick The Yakuza’s Bias, because it sounds fun and kooky.

KATE: My vote goes to Dark Gathering, if only to remind readers that Junji Ito isn’t the only artist cranking out horror stories.

ANNA: I cannot resist the siren call of old-school shoujo, Last Game is also my pick.

ASH: As much as I love Junji Ito, I also love that we seem to be getting more and different horror manga these days, so Dark Gathering has my attention this week. That being said, The Yakuza’s Bias looks like it could be a lot of fun, too.

Filed Under: PICK OF THE WEEK

Bookshelf Briefs 5/14/23

May 14, 2023 by Sean Gaffney and Michelle Smith Leave a Comment

Insomniacs After School, Vol. 1 | By Makoto Ojiro | Viz Media – The anime to this manga is currently airing this season, though I haven’t watched it yet. I hope it does its subject justice, as this was a very nice first volume. It’s clearly a setup for some romance, but that’s not in the cards yet, with boy-meets-girl being more like boy-and-girl-desperately-need-sleep. The problems with insomnia and what it can do to a person are not dwelled on in great detail, but are also thoughtfully examined, and I like how the guy’s crankiness is clearly more the lack of sleep than his actual personality. The one danger I can see in the future is that the lead girl’s insomnia stems from a medical condition, and, as others have already said, I hope this doesn’t go Your Lie in April on us. – Sean Gaffney

Kageki Shojo!!, Vol. 8 | By Kumiko Saiki | Seven Seas – I was right in that this whole volume was about the reaction to Sarasa leaving the performance to see her grandfather, but I was wrong in that the bulk of the criticism comes from Sarasa herself, especially when her grandfather turns out to be relatively OK, making her journey bittersweet. There’s a lot of discussion over which is more important for an actor, family or performance, and the book settles reluctantly on the latter—as does Sarasa’s grandfather, who reminds her that he’s going to inevitably die before her. Fortunately, there is some levity in this book, and it comes from Ai, who resolves to take over from Sarasa, and does a great job, but flubs a line very memorably, and that’s all anyone can think about. – Sean Gaffney

Kaguya-sama: Love Is War, Vol. 25 | By Aka Akasaka | Viz Media – Entirely dedicated to its finale, Kaguya-sama has, for the most part, abandoned its subplots for the main plot, which involves the decline and fall of the Shinomiyas, and how that’s interacting with Kaguya herself. There’s much discussion of how succession and financial success or failure works in a family this large and this corporate, especially when all the siblings seem to hate each other. Or do they? As Chika notes (and yes, this is Chika being serious, because the situation warrants it), Unyou might behave like an asshole, but in the end he’s as much a tsundere as his sister. That said, we still have a long way to go till Kaguya is rescued, and it might require intervention from their chief rivals, the Shijos. Good stuff. – Sean Gaffney

Love, That’s an Understatement, Vol. 1 | By Fujimomo | Kodansha Comics (digital only) – Having loved Fujimomo’s Lovesick Ellie, I figured I would enjoy Love, That’s an Understatement and I did. I must admit, however, that on the surface it has some pretty standard shoujo tropes, such as the manga starting with the heroine saving a beat-up delinquent in the rain—didn’t Honey So Sweet start that same exact way?—and having thoughts like, “This feeling… what do I call it?” But Fujimomo does excel at taking characters who appear cool and aloof and showing their vulnerabilities, and here that’s happening with both model student Risa Amakawa—seemingly composed and super capable—and Zen Ohira the hoodlum. Risa’s upbringing has led to her feeling like she has to handle everything alone, and Zen not only proves to be a reliable ally but someone who sees the real her. Echoes of Lovesick Ellie there, but I am very here for it. – Michelle Smith

No Longer Allowed in Another World, Vol. 2 | By Hiroshi Noda and Takahiro Wakamatsu | Seven Seas Good news for those who didn’t like the fact that the first volume was a variation on one joke: this volume does introduce an actual plot, and shows us what power our hero actually did get when he was transported. Unfortunately, for those who DID like that the series was a variation on one joke, there’s far less of that, and far more of the standard bullshit isekai things. This reminds me a bit of The Executioner and Her Way of Life, in that the bad guys are other kids from Japan who gained monstrous powers and, well, turned into monsters. Our hero has a way to “save” them, but I’ll be honest, I was hoping for more of the dark comedy. – Sean Gaffney

Snow White with the Red Hair, Vol. 24 | By Sorata Akiduki | Viz Media – I still greatly enjoy this series, but it’s pretty clear that, now that it’s pretty much an assured success that can end whenever it wants, some of the arcs are dragging a bit, and this one is a good example. We’re still in the midst of finding out who’s using the drugged scent and why, and the answer probably lies with a young woman who used to be Lord Eisetsu’s gardener. There’s danger, and more danger, with a cliffhanger showing Ryu’s in danger. Kageya is a very interesting tragic figure, but I am 100% certain she’s going to die protecting someone in a few chapters. The question is whether that’s actually the root cause of things, and the answer is probably not. New arc soon, perhaps? – Sean Gaffney

Spy x Family, Vol. 9 | By Tatsuya Endo | Viz Media – The wrap-up to the cruise ship arc is pitch perfect, and threatens to drown out the rest of the volume. Yor may not have firmly decided to give up being an assassin, but it’s clear her heart is no longer in it anymore. The rest of the book is one-shots, of the sort this series does in between arcs, with highlights being the unlikely team-up of Franky and Fiona, and Becky’s elementary schoolgirl attempts to act sexy and mature so Loid will notice her (then she sees Yor and realizes she’s doomed). There’s also a good mini-arc, where Bond tries to save victims from a fire, which turns out to have been set deliberately. A nice volume that shows off the entire cast well, and I think we’re now ready for more of the main plot. – Sean Gaffney

Usotoki Rhetoric, Vol. 2 | By Ritsu Miyako | One Peace Books – The cases get a little more substantial in the second volume of Usotoki Rhetoric, as the first involves solving a ten-year-old murder, but still a little less than satisfying, as the culprit is apprehended and confesses entirely off-camera. Kanoko has a crisis of self-doubt when her ability to hear lies causes her to suspect an innocent person who was only concealing a certain fact to protect someone else, and we see more about how she was shunned in her home village. She attempts to quit working as Iwai’s assistant, fearing hurting anyone else, but then realizes that he will be hurt if she quits. Lastly, Iwai and Kanoko handle a dispute in which a fountain pen figures prominently, to my delight. All in all, this is more low-key than a true mystery series, but still very enjoyable. – Michelle Smith

Filed Under: Bookshelf Briefs

Manga the Week of 5/17/23

May 12, 2023 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Ash Brown and Anna N Leave a Comment

SEAN: Mid-May, and will it be a quiet week?

ASH: Is that something that exists anymore?

SEAN: From Airship, we see new volumes! The Most Notorious “Talker” Runs the World’s Greatest Clan 4 and Reincarnated as a Sword 12.

And for early digital there is Classroom of the Elite: Year 2 5 and Vivy Prototype 4 (the final volume).

Ghost Ship gives us a 6th book of 2.5 Dimensional Seduction and a 7th volume of Creature Girls: A Hands-On Field Journal in Another World.

J-Novel Club blesses us with print titles! We see An Archdemon’s Dilemma: How to Love Your Elf Bride 14, Ascendance of a Bookworm 18, and the 3rd Seirei Gensouki: Spirit Chronicles manga.

ASH: Bookworm! In print!

SEAN: Digitally there are two debuts. Accidentally in Love: The Witch, the Knight, and the Love Potion Slipup (Koisuru Majo wa Elite Kishi ni Horegusuri o Nomasete Shimaimashita: Itsuwari kara Hajimaru Watashi no Dekiai Seikatsu) is in the Heart line, as you can imagine. A girl trying to hide that she’s a witch meets the man of her dreams… but she didn’t mean to drug him, honest! I think Cross Infinite World had a series with a similar premise.

ASH: Whoops!

ANNA: An easy mistake to make, I’m sure.

SEAN: There’s also Only the Villainous Lord Wields the Power to Level Up (Ore dake Level ga Agaru Sekai de Akutoku Ryōshu ni Natteita). This is a villainess book… but since it’s a male villain, it means he needs to be trapped in an RPG world as well. There are rules, after all.

ASH: That there are.

SEAN: There’s also new volumes: Death’s Daughter and the Ebony Blade 5, Der Werwolf: The Annals of Veight -Origins- 9, Haibara’s Teenage New Game+ 3, and The White Cat’s Revenge as Plotted from the Dragon King’s Lap 7.

Debuting in print from Kodansha is The Yakuza’s Bias (Yakuza no Oshigoto). This runs in Ichijinsha’s Comic Pool, but was also a popular webcomic. A yakuza hitman is also a huge K-pop stan! Hijinx no doubt ensue.

MICHELLE: This sounds potentially fun.

ASH: It really could be!

ANNA: It does sound fun.

SEAN: Also in print: Bakemonogatari 16, NO. 6 Manga Omnibus 3 (the final volume), Peach Boy Riverside 11, The Seven Deadly Sins: Four Knights of the Apocalypse 8, SHAMAN KING: FLOWERS 2, and When Will Ayumu Make His Move? 11.

ASH: Still glad to see NO. 6 staying in print. (And still living in hope that one day the novels will be translated, too…)

SEAN: The digital debut is Small Nozomi and Big Yume (Chiisai Nozomi to Ooki na Yume), which runs in Morning Two. A high school girl wakes up one day to find she’s lost her memories… and is also about five inches tall. Fearing being eaten by a cat, she takes refuge in the apartment of a drunken NEET and must convince her that she’s not hallucinating a tiny girl.

Also digitally: Blue Lock 19, Gamaran 9, We’re New at This 13 and Ya Boy Kongming! 11.

One Peace Books has a light novel, the 2nd volume of The Wrong Way to Use Healing Magic.

Three debuts from Seven Seas. Last Game is old-school shoujo from LaLa. A young man who is a winner at life (and also rich) arrives at high school and finds… a girl has beaten him! A commoner girl! At study! At sports! There’s just one thing to do: he has to make her fall for him! For those who love goofy but problematic old-school shoujo titles.

MICHELLE: It definitely gives S.A vibes.

SEAN: Shibanban: Super Cute Doggies is a spinoff manga based on the popular LINE sticker set of Shiba Inu dogs.

ASH: They really can make a manga out of anything!

ANNA: I’m amazed.

SEAN: Who Made Me a Princess is a manwha series that ran on the usual manwha online places. A girl finds herself in the story of her favorite novel… as the princess who gets executed! Still, she’s a baby, so has time to change her fate. Right?

ASH: Time will tell!

SEAN: And there’s also The Kingdoms of Ruin 6, Marmalade Boy: Collector’s Edition 2, The Most Notorious “Talker” Runs the World’s Greatest Clan 4, Re: Monster 6, Reincarnated as a Sword: Another Wish 4, The Savior’s Book Café Story in Another World 5 (the final volume), and The Weakest Tamer Began a Journey to Pick Up Trash 3.

MICHELLE: Speaking of old-school shoujo titles, looking forward to continuing my Marmalade Boy reread!

SEAN: From Square Enix we get The Girl I Like Forgot Her Glasses 3.

Tokyopop has three debuts. A Complicated Omega’s Second Love (Kojirase Omega no Nidome no Koi) ran in Gentosha’s Lynx, and is complete in one volume. An omega who hates alphas and has resolved to never be mated wakes up one morning… mated with his colleague.

Ogi’s Summer Break (Ogi-kun no Natsuyasumi) is a slightly less sexual BL title from Studio C.I.’s Haruto magazine. It’s a college romance between a boy who falls hard for another boy, who is blind.

And We Can’t Do Just Plain Love (Tada no Renai Nanka de Kikkonai – Kojirase Joushi to Fechina Buka) is josei, from Taiseisha’s Love Coffre. A new office worker discovers that her boss can’t be around women without getting aroused. Fortunately for him, she has a solution… if he’ll help her with her scent fetish.

The big title from Udon Entertainment is an artbook. Hidetaka Tenjin’s Artistry of Macross: From Flash Back 2012 to Macross Frontier is a deluxe 144-page hardcover that should please any fan who hates Carl Macek.

They also have Persona 4 Arena 2.

Viz debuts another horror title, but hey, it’s not by Junji Ito. Dark Gathering runs in Jump Square, and features a young man who is trying to avoid the supernatural (he can see spirits) tutoring a young girl who is trying to find the spirit who took her mother.

ASH: Ooooh, a horror manga, you say?

SEAN: Viz also gives us Choujin X 2, Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba: The Official Coloring Book 2, Twin Star Exorcists 28, and Zom 100: Bucket List of the Dead 10.

And there’s one single title from Yen Press next week, and it’s a debut. The manga adaptation of a beloved light novel classic, requested by many over the years. Yes, it’s Reborn as a Vending Machine, I Now Wander the Dungeon (Jidou Hanbaiki ni Umarekawatta Ore wa Meikyuu wo Samayou). This runs in Dengeki Daioh, and features a young man reborn as a vending machine, though the “wander” part is mostly incorrect. I Now Get Carried Around The Dungeon By My Ludicrously Strong Beastgirl Friend is more accurate.

ASH: Wow!

ANNA: What will they think of next???????

SEAN: Assuming you have not been reborn as a villainess or a vending machine, what are you buying next week?

Filed Under: FEATURES, manga the week of

Pick of the Week: Cages and Fairies

May 8, 2023 by Katherine Dacey, Michelle Smith, Sean Gaffney, Anna N and Ash Brown Leave a Comment

KATE: I won’t lie: I love the cover of Soloist in a Cage! Though my inner critic is whispering, “Don’t judge this book by the you-know-what,” my gut is telling me, “Make it your Pick of the Week! It looks cool! And stylish!” So I’m going with my gut on this one; Soloist is my choice.

MICHELLE: I am absolutely in the same boat. The premise didn’t wow me but the cover definitely made me reconsider!

SEAN: No question for me, it’s the first Earl and Fairy light novel. Old-school shoujo LNs are so rare these days, and I really want people to read this. The manga was good too, if I recall.

ANNA: I’m also picking the Earl and Fairy light novel due to my extreme affection for old-school shoujo.

ASH: The cover of Soloist in a Cage caught my eye, too, and dystopian tales often do interest me… but I’m actually going to make The Art of Haikyu!! my pick this week!

Filed Under: PICK OF THE WEEK

Manga the Week of 5/10/23

May 4, 2023 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Anna N and Ash Brown Leave a Comment

SEAN: Hopefully you are keeping your manga as dry as possible in these wet times.

We begin with Viz, who debut a new Shojo Beat title, Wolf Girl and Black Prince (Ookami Shoujo to Kuroouji). This Betsuma title is from the creator of Ima Koi: Now I’m in Love, but is actually one of their earlier stories. A girl who made up a fake boyfriend is on the verge of being called out for it. A handsome guy agrees to be her fake boyfriend. Unfortunately, he’s a sadistic type! For fans of sadistic types.

MICHELLE: Pass.

ANNA: Yes, as much as I enjoy new Shojo Beat titles this seems like Not My Thing. More time to get caught up on Ima Koi: Now I’m in Love!

SEAN: Also debuting is The Art of Haikyu!!, an artbook featuring art from Slam Dunk… no, just kidding, it’s from Haikyu!!.

ANNA: I mean, I like Haikyu!! but Slam Dunk is on a whole other level.

ASH: I am likewise an ardent supporter of both series. (And so am looking forward to this even if it isn’t Slam Dunk.)

SEAN: Viz also has Fly Me to the Moon 17, Helck 3, Mao 11, My Hero Academia: Vigilantes 14, Pokémon Adventures: X•Y 5, and YO-KAI WATCH 21.

From Udon Entertainment we get a debut, Record of Lodoss War: The Crown of the Covenant (Lodoss Tousenki: Seiyaku no Houkan) is a spinoff of the legendary light novel series, and ran in Shonen Ace. When a kingdom is in trouble, will Deedlit come to their aid?

SuBLime has a 2nd volume of Megumi & Tsugumi.

ASH: I’m not especially invested in Omegaverse fiction, buy I do like a good delinquent BL…

SEAN: The folks at Square Enix bring us By the Grace of the Gods 8, My Happy Marriage 3, and Tokyo Aliens 3.

One debut from Seven Seas. Soloist in a Cage (Ori no Naka no Soloist), a Shonen Jump + series, is in the “dystopian tragedy” genre. A girl born in a prison has only her younger brother to keep her going. Then she’s helped to break out… but has to leave her brother behind!

Seven Seas also has COLORLESS 4, The Hidden Dungeon Only I Can Enter 8, My Secret Affection 2 (the final volume), Skip and Loafer 7, and Slow Life In Another World (I Wish!) 5.

ASH: I really need to get caught up with Skip and Loafer.

SEAN: One Peace Books debuts The Death Mage (Yondome wa Iyana Shi Zokusei Majutsushi), whose light novel they’ve already been releasing. This is the manga version, serialized online on Comic Walker. A guy with terrible luck dies horribly, is reincarnated, dies even more horribly, and is now reincarnated again in hopes he’ll just kill himself rather than go through this again. But he now has… DEATH MAGIC!

ASH: That’s a twist!

SEAN: Kodansha Comics has titles, which unfortunately their new website makes impossible to find. In print, the debut is Twilight Out of Focus (Tasogare Outfocus), a BL title from Honey Milk magazine. Two roommates have rules that they say should not be broken. Who wants to bet these rules won’t last the book?

ASH: I’d say that’s a pretty good bet.

SEAN: We also get Chasing After Aoi Koshiba 4 (the final volume) and PTSD Radio Omnibus 3.

The digital debut is Tsugumi Project, which runs in Young Magazine. Another post-apocalyptic action series, a group of convicts are tasked with retrieving a weapon from a ruined city. But the city is less dead than anyone thought.

And we also see Ace of the Diamond 43, The Dawn of the Witch 6, The Fable 14, Fungus and Iron 3, Gang King 5, and Life 2: Giver/Taker 3.

MICHELLE: We’re rapidly approaching the end of Ace of the Diamond! I hope Kodansha plans to release the sequel, too.

SEAN: Two debuts from J-Novel Club. The big light novel one is Earl and Fairy (Hakushaku to Yousei), a long-running light novel fantasy series circa twenty years ago that spawned a short-running manga version Viz licensed ages ago. A young Victorian woman with an interest in fairies teams up with a noble in a quest to retrieve a treasured sword. Get this, it’s really, really good fantasy.

ANNA: I’m intrigued and I usually don’t go in for light novels.

ASH: Wow, Earl and Fairy, that takes me back!

SEAN: The manga debut is Now I’m a Demon Lord! Happily Ever After with Monster Girls in My Dungeon (Maou ni Natta node, Dungeon Tsukutte Jingai Musume to Honobono suru), the manga version of the light novel J-Novel Club also releases. It runs in Dra-Dra-Dragon Age, Japan’s greatest love machine. (Sorry.) (That really is the magazine title, I promise.)

And we also get Housekeeping Mage from Another World: Making Your Adventures Feel Like Home! 5, A Late-Start Tamer’s Laid-Back Life 6, My Daughter Left the Nest and Returned an S-Rank Adventurer 8, Peddler in Another World: I Can Go Back to My World Whenever I Want! 3, Perry Rhodan NEO 13, and Saint? No! I’m Just a Passing Beast Tamer! 3.

Ghost Ship has new volumes of The 100 Girlfriends Who Really, Really, Really, Really, REALLY Love You 6, I’m Not a Succubus! 3, and Sundome!! Milky Way 6.

Dark Horse Comics gives us Keep Your Hands Off Eizouken! 5.

ASH: Another reminder that I am behind on both my manga reading and my anime watching.

SEAN: Airship, in print, has new releases for The Case Files of Jeweler Richard 4, Classroom of the Elite: Year 2 4.5, and I Swear I Won’t Bother You Again! 3.

And for early digital releases, there is Loner Life in Another World 5, Monster Girl Doctor 10 (the final volume), and She Professed Herself Pupil of the Wise Man 7.

Sounds good! What manga of yours is getting rained on?

Filed Under: FEATURES, manga the week of

Pick of the Week: It’s Iruma-kuns All The Way Down

May 1, 2023 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Ash Brown, Anna N and Katherine Dacey Leave a Comment

SEAN: I mean, it’s Welcome to Demon School! Iruma-kun, right? This series has ALL the buzz.

MICHELLE: Absolutely. I’ve been waiting eagerly for this since it was announced.

ASH: Yup, I’m on board for this one, too! It seems like it should be a lot of fun, so I’m looking forward to finding out.

ANNA: I’m not going to go against this emerging consensus!

KATE: At the risk of becoming the most predictable member of the MB Battle Robot, I, too, am voting for Welcome to Demon School! Iruma-kun.

Filed Under: PICK OF THE WEEK

Pick of the Week: Demons, Delinquents, and Divorce Agents

April 24, 2023 by Michelle Smith, Sean Gaffney, Katherine Dacey, Ash Brown and Anna N Leave a Comment

MICHELLE: There’s plenty of shoujo manga about a girl encountering a delinquent who is not as bad as his reputation suggests, but since Love, That’s an Understatement is from Fujimomo, creator of Lovesick Ellie, I feel sure it will be quirky and wonderful. Thus, it’s my choice this week.

SEAN: Tempting as it is to pick the Wiley business titles, my pick is clearly going to be The Apothecary Witch Turned Divorce Agent, a series I was excited for long before its license based solely on the title.

KATE: A new manga by Hiromu Arakawa? Count me in!

ASH: Hiromu Arakawa is where it’s at for me this week, too, so Daemons of the Shadow Realm is my pick. That being said, I am intrigued by Wiley’s entry into manga publishing although its not the first time we’ve seen business-oriented titles released. (Does anyone else remember Bringing Home the Sushi from the ’90s?)

ANNA: As a fan of Lovesick Ellie I’m also extremely interested in Love, That’s an Understatement.

Filed Under: PICK OF THE WEEK

Manga the Week of 4/26/23

April 20, 2023 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Anna N and Ash Brown Leave a Comment

SEAN: Manga the Week of is here for all of your manga needs. All of our contributors are with other customers right now. Please hold.

MICHELLE: Your position in the queue is… 7.

SEAN: We start with Yen Press, who have two stragglers from last week: Is It Wrong to Try to Pick Up Girls in a Dungeon? On the Side: Sword Oratoria 19 and Kowloon Generic Romance 3.

ASH: Only two, eh? I hear Kowloon Generic Romance is a good one!

SEAN: A brief detour to look at academic publisher Wiley. They’re putting out six books in a series called Manga for Success, that are basically corporate help books that use manga to break things down in an easy to follow way. They appear to be based on a set of Japanese books that came out about eight years ago.

ASH: Wow! It’s not often that academic publishers are releasing manga.

SEAN: There’s a new Viz Signature debut, Boy’s Abyss (Shounen no Abyss). It’s a Weekly Young Jump series that’s Boy Meets Girl, but also has the tags ‘psychological’, ‘drama’, and ‘tragedy’, so expect a bit more than high school hijinks. A high school boy with a very dull life finds a pop idol working at his local store one day.

MICHELLE: Hm …

ASH: The cover artwork is striking and I am intrigued.

SEAN: There’s also The Art of Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba (an artbook) and Jujutsu Kaisen: Thorny Road at Dawn (a light novel).

ASH: While I’ve fallen behind the Demon Slayer curve, I am glad the artbook was licensed.

SEAN: Two BL one-shots from Tokyopop. Cut Over Criteria runs in a magazine titled NUUDE, and as you can imagine is a mature title. Office romance between a new recruit and a brooding systems engineer.

There’s also Platinum Blood, also running in the same magazine, about the relationship between a priest and a vampire, and it has like 5 different content warnings on he solicit.

(Yeah, I know, shut up. I swear it said 4/18 on their website last week.)

A debut from Square Enix. Daemons of the Shadow Realm (Yomi no Tsugai) is the latest title from Hiromu Arakawa (Fullmetal Alchemist, Silver Spoon, etc.) and runs in Shonen Gangan. A boy lives a quiet life in his quiet mountain village… until his younger sister is called to work at the local jail. Which also means being confined in the local jail. What’s going on here?

ANNA: OK, I’m curious now!

ASH: Hiromu Arakawa, you say!

SEAN: We also get Otherside Picnic 4 and Suppose a Kid from the Last Dungeon Boonies Moved to a Starter Town 8.

Two debuts from Seven Seas. My Girlfriend’s Child (Ano Ko no Kodomo) is a shoujo series from Betsufure. A young couple in high school have to deal with the fact that she’s now pregnant. This has been nominated for some awards.

MICHELLE: The art on the cover is interesting!

ANNA: Also intrigued.

ASH: Likewise.

SEAN: And there’s a new danmei novel, Remnants of Filth: Yuwu. This is set in the same world as The Husky and His White Cat Shizun. Two commanders in love are torn apart when one betrays their nation. But what’s the real story?

ANNA: I need to read so many other danmei novels.

ASH: I am so glad these are coming out, but I am so far behind.

SEAN: Seven Seas also has Free Life Fantasy Online: Immortal Princess 3, The Girl From the Other Side: Siúil, a Rún Deluxe Edition III, The Haunted Bookstore – Gateway to a Parallel Universe 3, My Lovey-Dovey Wife is a Stone Cold Killer 4, My Status as an Assassin Obviously Exceeds the Hero’s 4, Reincarnated as a Sword 10, Succubus and Hitman 3, and Yakuza Reincarnation 5.

ASH: The deluxe editions of The Girl From the Other Side are so pretty.

SEAN: Kodansha Books has the second volume of Am I Actually the Strongest?.

Kodansha Manga has more. In print: Cardcaptor Sakura: Clear Card 13, EDENS ZERO 22, Fire Force 32, The Heroic Legend of Arslan 17, I Was Reincarnated as the 7th Prince so I Can Take My Time Perfecting My Magical Ability 5, The Iceblade Sorcerer Shall Rule the World 5, Phantom of the Idol 5, and Shangri-La Frontier 5. (That’s a lot of 5s.)

Debuting digitally is Love, That’s an Understatement (Hikaeme ni Itte mo, Kore wa Ai). This is a new Dessert series from the Lovesick Ellie creator. A high school girl saves a delinquent she finds beaten up in the park. She refuses any repayment… but suddenly finds that this guy and his minions are all around her now!

MICHELLE: Having adored Lovesick Ellie, I’m really interested in this one!

ANNA: Oh, as a fan of Lovesick Ellie I am intrigued but I wish it was coming out in print.

SEAN: Other digital titles: Boss Bride Days 4, Even Given the Worthless “Appraiser” Class, I’m Actually the Strongest 7, Gamaran: Shura 7, Girlfriend, Girlfriend 13, Hozuki’s Coolheadedness 13, Koigakubo-kun Stole My First Time 4, Love After World Domination 6 (the final volume), My Home Hero 3, Our Bodies, Entwining, Entwined 5, and Space Brothers 42.

There’s three debuts and one side story debut from J-Novel Club. The side story is Ascendance of a Bookworm: Short Story Collection, which is just what it sounds like, and covers everything from Myne’s early days making paper to Rozemyne’s academy adventures.

ASH: Yay!

SEAN: The Apothecary Witch Turned Divorce Agent (Kusushi no Majo Desu ga, Nazeka Fukugyō de Rikon Daikō Shiteimasu) is sadly not about a crusading woman going after asshole husbands, which is what I thought it would be. Carla’s not a very good witch, which is why she runs the divorce agency. Though… everyone who sees her for a divorce ends up getting back together?

ANNA: I wish it was about encouraging divorce, that sounds much more interesting.

SEAN: A Cave King’s Road to Paradise: Climbing to the Top with My Almighty Mining Skills! (Dōkutsu Ō kara Hajimeru Rakuen Life: Bannō no Saikutsu Skill de Saikyō ni!?) is one of those “I have a power everyone thinks is useless, so suddenly I am hated, exiled, and left to die series. Spoiler, it’s not useless.

There’s also A Royal Rebound: Forget My Ex-Fiancé, I’m Being Pampered by the Prince! (Konyakusha ga Uwakiaite to Kakeochi Shimashita. Ōji Denka ni Dekiaisarete Shiawase nanode, Ima sara Modoritai to Iwarete mo Komarimasu). A young woman is happily engaged and studying to be a mage… but when she gets to the academy, suddenly her fiance is shunning her? What’s going on here?

And we get I Surrendered My Sword for a New Life as a Mage 2, Monster Tamer 13, Reincarnated as the Piggy Duke: This Time I’m Gonna Tell Her How I Feel! 10 (the final volume), and The Tales of Marielle Clarac’s 6th manga volume.

From Ghost Ship we get Ayakashi Triangle 3, JK Haru is a Sex Worker in Another World 5, SUPER HXEROS 10, and Wicked Trapper: Hunter of Heroes 2.

Two debuts from Cross Infinite World. Lovestruck Prince! I’ll Fight the Heroine for My Villainess Fiancée! (Betabore no Kon’yakusha ga Akuyaku Reijou ni Sare sou na no de Heroine-gawa ni wa Sore Souou no Mukui wo Ukete Morau) is both a “someone is trying to make a non-evil girl into a villainess” book as well as a rare villainess book with a male protagonist.

The Reincarnated Villainess Won’t Seek Revenge (Tensei Shita Akuyaku Reijou wa Fukushuu wo Nozomanai) is also a Villainess book, of course. A young noble is hanged for a crime she didn’t commit. Now reincarnated, all her new self wants to do is live a quiet life away from politics. Sadly, she’s not the only one reincarnated, and everyone ELSE around her wants to get her revenge for her.

Airship gives us 7th Time Loop: The Villainess Enjoys a Carefree Life Married to Her Worst Enemy! 3, Didn’t I Say to Make My Abilities Average in the Next Life?! 15, and I’m the Evil Lord of an Intergalactic Empire! 4.

And in early digital, they have Disciple of the Lich: Or How I Was Cursed by the Gods and Dropped Into the Abyss! 5 and The Haunted Bookstore – Gateway to a Parallel Universe 5.

Thank you for holding, how may we assist you?

Filed Under: FEATURES, manga the week of

Pick of the Week: Manga? Or Manwha?

April 18, 2023 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Katherine Dacey, Anna N and Ash Brown Leave a Comment

SEAN: Tempting as it is to pick one of Yen’s 7 new titles, this is the last time I get to pick Dead Dead Demon’s Dededede Destruction, so it has to be that. My hope is for the end of the series to not have the death of all of humanity. Gonna be tough.

MICHELLE: The lure of josei manhwa calls to me, and so What’s Wrong with Secretary Kim? is my choice this week.

KATE: I agree with Michelle: grown-up manwha for me too!

ANNA: Me too! What’s Wrong with Secretary Kim? sounds quite interesting.

ASH: I definitely plan to be reading What’s Wrong with Secretary Kim? at some point, but my pick this week goes to I Hear the Sunspot: Four Seasons. I’ve really been enjoying the series, so I’m looking forward to picking up the most recent installment.

Filed Under: PICK OF THE WEEK

Pick of the Week: March in April

April 10, 2023 by Ash Brown, Katherine Dacey, Sean Gaffney, Anna N, Michelle Smith and MJ Leave a Comment

ASH: While it’s the opposite of a debut, my pick this week goes to the final volume of The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess. I’ve certainly been enjoying Akira Himekawa’s adaptation of the titular video game, but it also makes me wish that some of the team’s original work would be licensed, too.

KATE: March Comes in Like a Lion. (I mean…. what else did you think I’d pick?!)

SEAN: Apparently it came out and immediately sold out, so I won’t be able to read it yet, but my pick this week has to be March Comes in Like a Lion, the long, long, LONG awaited shogi and angst masterpiece.

ANNA: March Comes in Like a Lion! I hope one day I will be able to order and read it!

ASH: Oh! The ship actually came in? I won’t get my hands on my copy for quite some time yet it seems, but I’m excited for March Comes in Like a Lion, too!

MICHELLE: I’m kind of in “I’ll believe it when I see it” territory on this one, but what the heck. Count me in for March Comes in Like a Lion!

MJ: I mean… it’s obviously March Comes in Like a Lion.

Filed Under: PICK OF THE WEEK

Manga the Week of 4/12/23

April 7, 2023 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Anna N and Ash Brown Leave a Comment

SEAN: April continues apace!

ASH: That it does!

SEAN: We start with Yen On finally getting a trailing aspidistra of a release, the 4th volume of Magical Explorer: Reborn as a Side Character in a Fantasy Dating Sim.

From Viz Media we see Case Closed 86, Dandadan 3, The Hunters Guild: Red Hood 3 (the final volume), Kaiju No. 8 6, Komi Can’t Communicate 24, The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess 11 (the final volume), Pokémon: Sword & Shield 6, Sakamoto Days 7, and Sleepy Princess in the Demon Castle 20.

ASH: I need to catch up on quite a few of these! Most likely starting with Twilight Princess.

SEAN: Udon debuts Persona 4 Arena, a Dengeki Maoh series for all you folks who wished Persona 4 were a fighting game. This is, in fact, an adaptation of a video game. (It got bumped. Again. I will keep doing this over and over, I warn them.)

ASH: (It’s only fair.)

SEAN: They also have a 5th volume of Daigo The Beast: Umehara Fighting Gamers! (which also got bumped).

Some interesting debuts from Tokyopop, which is now Stu Levy-free. My Coworker Has a Secret (Wakeari Danjo no Secret Days) is a josei title from Comic Qurie. A young woman works in a bookstore and tries to hide her huge otaku secret. Then her coworker finds out… but he also has a secret.

MICHELLE: Hm. The cover is kind of cute and it is josei…

ANNA: Ok, this might break my vow to ignore Tokyopop releases…..

ASH: I am cautiously curious, for sure.

SEAN: There’s also Sengoku Youko, an older shonen title by the creator of The Lucifer and Biscuit Hammer and Spirit Circle. It ran in Comic Blade, and features two demon siblings trying to right wrongs.

MICHELLE: This cover is the TOKYOPOPiest thing I have seen in years.

ASH: Ha!

SEAN: Lastly, the inevitable BL title from Canna, another one-shot, Snow Fairy (Yuki no Yousei). A photographer trying to photograph fairies ends up stranded in the snow, and is taken in by a country farm boy.

Titan Manga has the 4th volume of ATOM: The Beginning.

From SuBLime we get the 6th volume of Black or White and the 11th volume of Don’t Be Cruel.

Square Enix Manga gives us My Dress-Up Darling 8 and My Isekai Life 6.

ASH: My Dress-Up Darling is another series I need to catch up on; I rather enjoyed its earlier volumes.

SEAN: Two debuts from Seven Seas. First we have My New Life as a Cat (Neko, Hajimemashita: Nyantomo Ki ni Naru Nyao). It’s reincarnation isekai (high school student hit by a car), but he’s a cat. It runs in Ciao Deluxe, so is probably written for tween girls. (His owner is a girl.)

ASH: I guess this technically counts as a cat manga?

SEAN: The other debut is There’s No Freaking Way I’ll be Your Lover! Unless… (Watashi ga Koibito ni Nareru Wake Naijan, Muri Muri! (*Muri Janakatta!?)), the manga adaptation of a light novel Seven Seas will be releasing in a couple months. A gloomy girl is trying to reinvent herself in high school… with limited success. She then forms a friendship with the school idol. Then things go pear-shaped when the idol confesses to her! This runs in Dash x Comic.

Also from Seven Seas: Chronicles of an Aristocrat Reborn in Another World 6, Dungeon Builder: The Demon King’s Labyrinth is a Modern City! 7, The Ideal Sponger Life 13, Kingdom of Z 6 (the final volume), Malevolent Spirits: Mononogatari 2, MoMo -the blood taker- 4, No Longer Allowed In Another World 2, This Is Screwed Up, but I Was Reincarnated as a GIRL in Another World! 6, and Trapped in a Dating Sim: The World of Otome Games is Tough for Mobs 7.

From One Peace Books we see Multi-Mind Mayhem 7.

Kodansha Books has some print titles. We get Am I Actually the Strongest? 2, Don’t Toy With Me, Miss Nagatoro 14, I’m Standing on a Million Lives 13, Orient 14, Real Account 21-22, Shonen Note: Boy Soprano 3, Shikimori’s Not Just a Cutie 12, To Your Eternity 18, and the 17th and final volume of Witchcraft Works.

MICHELLE: I really need to read Shonen Note.

ASH: A good Kodansha print week!

SEAN: Digitally, we see The Fable 13, Fairy Tail: 100 Years Quest 12, Gang King 4, Giant Killing 36, Girlfriend, Girlfriend 13, Life 2: Giver/Taker 2, Police in a Pod 22, Space Brothers 42, and Tokyo Revengers 30.

We have some debuts from J-Novel Club. Reincarnated Mage with Inferior Eyes: Breezing through the Future as an Oppressed Ex-Hero (Rettougan no Tensei Majutsushi – Shiitagerareta Moto Yuusha wa Mirai no Sekai o Yoyuu de Ikinuku). A strong and powerful mage is hated and feared by everyone around him because his eyes show just how powerful he is. He sends himself into the future in hopes there won’t be the same prejudice. This is J-Novel Club’s first novel license from Shueisha, which is the only reason I’ll be trying it.

Survival Strategies of a Corrupt Aristocrat (Akutoku Kizoku no Seizon Senryaku) is a relatively new title from their partner Drecom. A guy burying himself in games after his wife betrayed him ends up inside the game as Jack… whose life is far, far worse. Fortunately, our hero knows how the game turns out, and also knows the strongest support character. Can he turn his life around? I’ll be honest, I decided not to read this when I saw the word betrayed.

Also from J-Novel Club: Chillin’ in Another World with Level 2 Super Cheat Powers 9, The Game Master Has Logged In to Another World 2, The Invincible Little Lady 2, Rebuild World’s 3rd manga volume, The Reincarnated Princess Spends Another Day Skipping Story Routes 7, and Seventh 3.

Ghost Ship has several titles next week. Call Girl in Another World 6, GUNBURED × SISTERS 4 (the final volume), Parallel Paradise 13, World’s End Harem Vol. 14 – After World, World’s End Harem: Fantasia 8, and Yuuna and the Haunted Hot Springs 23.

Denpa has said this should be available next week, so here we go. March Comes in Like a Lion (Sangatsu no Lion) is a legendary manga from the creator of Honey and Clover. It’s about a teenage boy with a very troubled life, and it’s also about shogi. It runs in Young Animal.

MICHELLE: Fingers crossed!

ANNA: Yay!!!

ASH: Here for it whenever it’s here!

SEAN: In print from Airship, we see Free Life Fantasy Online: Immortal Princess 2, She Professed Herself Pupil of the Wise Man 6, Skeleton Knight in Another World 10, and The Strange Adventure of a Broke Mercenary 7.

And for early digital we get Raven of the Inner Palace 2, Reborn as a Space Mercenary: I Woke Up Piloting the Strongest Starship! 6, and Survival in Another World with My Mistress! 5.

That’s a whole lot. I’m exhausted, how about you?

ASH: Utterly.

Filed Under: FEATURES, manga the week of

Bookshelf Briefs 4/5/23

April 5, 2023 by Katherine Dacey, Sean Gaffney, Anna N and Michelle Smith

Ayashimon, Vol. 1 | By Yuji Kaku | VIZ – Ayashimon starts with a bang: we meet Maruo, a boy who’s so obsessed with shonen manga that he devotes his entire childhood to becoming as strong as his favorite heroes. In a few nifty sight gags, author Yuji Kaku establishes how quickly Maruo becomes invincible, to the point where he’s feared by everyone and unable to work a normal, nine-to-five job. A chance encounter with a demonic mob boss puts the despondent Maruo on a new path, however, leading to a steady gig as the muscleman for a scrappy yakuza gang. It’s at this moment in the story that volume one begins to sag; the later chapters lack the comedic flair and brisk pacing of the introduction, as Kaku relies too much on expository dialogue for world-building purposes, in the process squandering the good will he created with his energetic, imaginative introduction. – Katherine Dacey

The Invisible Man and His Soon-to-Be Wife, Vol. 1 | By Iwatobineko | Seven Seas – This one has a bit of a gimmick, as it’s in shades of blue rather than in black and white. It might need the gimmick as it’s basically sweet and nice and that’s about it. A detective agency is run by a man who is invisible, helped by a boisterous beast girl, a grumpy but kind human guy, and the secretary, who is blind but always seems to know just where her boss is. The two quickly fall for each other. Sadly, the two are also both terminally shy and awkward, so this is a very slow-burn romance, mostly consisting of dinner dates and discussion of how each of them deals with the problem surrounding sight. I’m not sure I want to read this in an ongoing manner, but there’s absolutely nothing wrong with it. If you like cute, it’s here for you. – Sean Gaffney

Marmalade Boy: Collector’s Edition, Vol. 1 | By Wataru Yoshizumi | Seven Seas – Marmalade Boy was one of the first manga I ever read, and I’ve always remembered it with extreme fondness. Thus, I was fairly concerned that I’d not like it as much upon a reread. Happily, I needn’t have worried, because this series is still great and conjures up many nostalgic feelings. Yes, the premise of Miki and Yuu’s parents switching partners, remarrying, and merging their families under one roof is kind of out there, but I enjoyed Miki’s reactions to everything going on in her life and Yuu was actually a lot kinder—and more obviously interested in architecture—than I remembered him being at the outset. The color pages in this new edition are also really nice. True, there is a student-teacher romance that has not aged at all well, but that’s not going to stop me from relishing revisiting a beloved fave. – Michelle Smith

Medalist, Vols. 6 | By Tsurumaikada | Kodansha Comics (digital only) – This is now an award-winning manga, and I assume it’s selling like crap, or else it would definitely be getting a print release. It deserves it so much. The first chapter in this volume is a fist-pumping burst of joy, as everything Inori has been training for up to that point comes together and she absolutely blows everyone away. And then we get the rest of the volume, where she realizes that there’s still so much more she has to learn—and learn fast—or else she’s toast. The manga never hesitates to remind you what a cutthroat world figure skating is, and how it has no mercy for anyone who cannot keep up. Tsukasa is also realizing this as well, and has just as many self-esteem issues as Inori… with the added pressure of needing to be her rock. I cannot wait to see what happens next, and hope she goes as far as possible. – Sean Gaffney

My Hero Academia: Team-Up Missions, Vol. 3 | By Yoko Akiyama and Kohei Horikoshi | Viz Media – It’s hard to review this kind of spinoff because the stakes are so low. Nothing unusual can happen, as it can’t break canon. And, sadly, a huge chunk of it has to feature the stars—there’s a major story here that’s once again about Bakugou being really mad, and Izuku flinching a lot. In the main part of the series, he’s apologized for the bullying, but not the constant rage, really. Oh yes, and there’s a Mineta chapter where he dresses up as a small dog for perverse reasons. The girls are disgusted with him, but no one bothers to file a complaint with the school or anything—by now I assume they go unread. I think what I’m trying to say is that I take My Hero Academia too seriously to enjoy this wannabe version. – Sean Gaffney

My Special One, Vol. 1 | By Momoka Koda | VIZ – Sahoko hates attractive boys and is almost pathological in her dislike of idols, loudly proclaiming that she hopes that all of them are cursed to become fat and bald. She’s still suffering from the aftereffects of her first love confession going terribly wrong. However, her feelings begin to change when she meets an idol in real life. Kouta appears in the neighborhood diner that Sahoko’s family runs. Sahoko becomes flustered when she asks Kouta for an autograph for her best friend Yuko, and when he turns his charm on her she becomes filled with unfamiliar feelings…could she actually be developing a crush on a cute boy?! The first volume of this manga is cute, if a bit predictable. While there’s some humor, I wasn’t extremely invested in the characters. I’m not sure if it is going to make it into my regular reading rotation, but I could definitely see myself binging on it at some point in the future if I’m in the mood for low-stakes romance. – Anna N

She Loves to Cook and She Loves to Eat, Vol. 2 | By Sakaomi Yuzaki | Yen Press – Food is still the primary reason for the manga, but now that it’s settled in this new volume is ready to delve deeper into the lives of both its leads. Notomo is being pressured to marry, and constantly sees dating advice given as if it assumes that she’s cishet, and is not a happy camper. We also learn Kasuga’s past, as she was part of an abusive household growing up, where she and her mother were treated as second-class citizens due to being women. As this is happening, both are subtly trying to feel out if this is just a really good friendship or something more, but unfortunately neither one of them have the answer yet. This manga is frankly fantastic, one of the best I’ve read recently, and every LGBTA fan should pick it up. – Sean Gaffney

We’re New at This, Vol. 12 | By Ren Kawahara | Kodansha Comics (digital only) – We’re New at This is trying its best to give us good observations about how to be a loving couple and not annoy your partner too much, and now that we’re observing more than one couple we get to see some things we wouldn’t with our leads, such as how to deal with a pregnant wife. As for Ikuma and Sumika, they are here for that, but they also get to carry the bulk of the OTHER reason readers love this, which is the sexy times. Here a cherry blossom party quickly turns alcoholic, and a horny Sumika asks her husband to get them to a love hotel… which turns out to have a few devices that might take their heights of ecstasy even further. These two really, really love each other, both as a married couple and as two folks who really love sex. It’s still cute. – Sean Gaffney

Filed Under: Bookshelf Briefs

Pick of the Week: Cinderellas and Akitas

April 3, 2023 by Sean Gaffney, Katherine Dacey, Michelle Smith, Ash Brown and Anna N Leave a Comment

SEAN: Tempting as it is to go with the manga featuring what looks like the dumbest dog ever on the cover (Lovely Muco), I will instead go with Tista. I’ve heard the author’s pre-Spy x Family stuff can get pretty dark, but I’m willing to try it, mostly because it looks hella cool.

KATE: After living with a smart, stubborn dog for 13 years–one who was intent on herding me everywhere, and woke me up at 5:45 am every morning–I fantasize about owning a cheerful, dim, and uncomplicated pooch! I’m not quite in the right spot to adopt a new dog right now, so Lovely Muco sounds like the next best thing.

MICHELLE: Cinderella Closet has a premise that doesn’t exactly thrill me—transform with the power of makeup!—but it gives me a little bit of a Princess Jellyfish vibe and it ran in Margaret, so I’ll take a chance by picking it this week.

ASH: More often than not, I choose a debut for my pick of the week, but this time I’m going to try to actually make good on my promise to catch up with My Love Mix-Up!, so that series gets my vote.

ANNA: I’m also going to go with the lure of the new and pick Cinderella Closet!

Filed Under: PICK OF THE WEEK

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