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Manga Bookshelf

Discussion, Resources, Roundtables, & Reviews

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Bookshelf Briefs 3/1/23

March 1, 2023 by Sean Gaffney Leave a Comment

Blue Box, Vol. 2 | By Kouji Miura | Viz Media – The combination of sports manga and romcom is the series’ main strength, as we saw from the first volume, but it can also be a weakness, as right now I’m frankly more invested in the sports than I am in the romance. It doesn’t help that in this second volume Chinatsu is literally fought over as a prize in a badminton match, a subplot that I always hope will be left dead and buried but never is. Clearly she is going to get her own focus in the series at some point in the future, but this is a Jump title, so there’s always the chance that she won’t, and this is going to be the Taiki show. And Taiki is fine, he’s a perfectly good protagonist, but this is being sold as a two-person book but isn’t yet. – Sean Gaffney

Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End, Vol. 7 | By Kanehito Yamada and Tsukasa Abe| Viz Media – Folks who were a bit put off by what amounted to a tournament arc for two+ volumes will be relieved to hear that it ends with this volume, and we get back to the main cast wandering the world, and Frieren slowly learning all the things that she never quite got when she was traveling with the hero. Fern is not quite as bad as her master, but she does seem to suffer from an inability to come to terms with her feelings, which mostly amounts to what she wants from Stark. Most of this comes out as tsundere romcom schtick, but in the context of the series as a whole, I find I enjoy it better. Still one of the better fantasy manga out there. – Sean Gaffney

My Hero Academia, Vol. 33 | By Kohei Horikoshi | Viz Media – It’s no secret to anyone who follows my various fandom things that Uraraka is my favorite character in this series, so this entire volume was like catnip to me. Of course, that does not mean that I’m ignoring The Apology That Broke MHA Fandom, which I think was about as good as we were going to get given that, unlike many fan writers, Horikoshi is not really interested in having Bakugo suffer for his childhood crimes. In any case, now that Izuku is back at his home base and the general public are reluctantly willing to give him a chance, what could possibly happen next? Well, I’m afraid we have to call in the marines. But that’s next volume’s problem, and oh, I will have things to say. This volume, though, was excellent. – Sean Gaffney

The 100 Girlfriends Who Really, Really, Really, Really, REALLY Love You, Vol. 5 | By Rikito Nakamura and Yukiko Nozawa | Ghost Ship I mostly love this series, so let’s get the annoying bad thing out of the way first off: Japan has far more interest in girls peeing themselves than I ever will. That said, it’s as part of a gag, as is this entire series, so I’ll handwave it. We get two more girlfriends in this book. One is a high school baseball player trying to save her club who turns out to be a masochist, and the other is a rich ojou with a destined rivalry with Nano, as well as a love of beauty. There’s fourth wall breaking, there’s unabashed horniness, but as always, there really is a heartwarming polycule at the center of this, which is why I love it. – Sean Gaffney

Queen’s Quality, Vol. 16 | By Kyousuke Motomi | Viz Media – This is, at the very least, slightly less depressing than the previous book, which is good. That said, I think I have to face up to the fact that this does not come out often enough that I can keep up with anything anymore, and it’s hard for me to remember anyone in the cast who isn’t Fumi and Kyutaro. But to be honest, that’s not as big a problem as you’d expect. This series has come to run on vibe and coolness, and if you don’t remember who anyone is or what’s happening, there’s plenty of good dialogue, supernatural battles, and shoujo romantic tease. But counting QQ Sweeper, we’re nearly twenty volumes in, and oof, I’m starting to get exhausted. – Sean Gaffney

Snow White with the Red Hair, Vol. 23 | By Sorata Akiduki | Viz Media – I am afraid that our heroes are getting Known. This was always the case with Zen, who sits this book out for the most part, but Shirayuki and Obi are pretty famous now, which means that they might be asked to solve mysteries, in the best detective story fashion. Given that Obi is basically a ninja and Shirayuki specializes in medicine, it’s not a bad combination, so we get the start of an arc asking who the noble is that’s going around to various fancy dress balls, and why no one can quite remember what happened at the ball afterwards. Good stuff, though we’ll have to wait till next time to see who’s actually behind it. Plus we get to see Angry Shirayuki, always a treat. – Sean Gaffney

Filed Under: Bookshelf Briefs

Marmalade Boy: Collector’s Edition, Vol. 1

March 1, 2023 by Katherine Dacey

One of shojo manga’s most time-honored plot lines goes something like this: a young girl’s life is turned upside down when her mother or father remarries someone with a teenager of their own, usually a cute boy who’s smart, athletic, and insufferable. Over the course of six or ten volumes, however, the heroine gradually moves from indignation to infatuation, finally admitting to herself what everyone else could plainly see: she likes her stepbrother. There are a usually a few complications on the way to a blissful relationship—say, a crazy ex-girlfriend who won’t go away—but the step-siblings eventually realize that they’re meant to be together.

Wataru Yoshizumi’s Marmalade Boy adds a new wrinkle to the formula, however, by engineering a crazy scenario for bringing her romantic antagonists under the same roof. In the opening pages of volume one, fifteen-year-old Miki Koishikawa’s parents come back from a trip with shocking news: they’re getting divorced. Making matters worse is that the Koishikawas have decided to swap partners with the Matsuras, a couple they met while traveling, and combine their families into a single household that includes both Miki and the Matsuras’ son Yuu. Yuu, of course, is a quintessential shojo prince: he’s gifted at tennis, an ace at math, and popular at school and—naturally—Miki hates him. She finds him smug in his refusal to criticize their parents’ impulsive behavior, and is furious that no one seems to understand her reservations about their new living situation. 

Their blended family life is established with great efficiency, setting the stage for plenty of misunderstandings and fights between Miki and Yuu. Yoshizumi also wastes no time in introducing other romantic prospects for both leads; a good part of volume one, in fact, follows the complicated friendship between Miki and Ginta, a cute tennis player who Miki used to like. Yuu, meanwhile, has his own romantic travails when his ex-girlfriend Arimi tracks him down at his new school, determined to rekindle their relationship by any means necessary. And if all those potential entanglements weren’t enough to fill thirty or forty chapters, Miki’s best friend Meiko starts hooking up with her hot homeroom teacher in the school library.

If I’m reading the story in Responsible Adult Mode™, it’s hard to ignore all the WTF? shenanigans. In one of the weirdest scenes in volume one, for example, the Matsuras and Koishikawas stage a fight to see whether Miki truly disapproves of their living arrangement, confessing their deceit only after a tearful Miki begs them to follow their hearts. The sight of all four parents gaslighting their daughter is comically awful; I’d be the first to admit that I’m on Team Miki, as she seems to be the only person who grasps the impulsiveness of the adults’ spouse-swapping arrangement. Then there are the usual shojo red flags: student-teacher relationships, stolen kisses, and characters whose behavior sails over the line between friendly interest and stalking.

If I allow myself to reconnect with my inner twelve-year-old, however, I have to admit that Marmalade Boy is funny, silly, and engrossing, offering a teenage gloss on Dynasty or Melrose Place. It’s the kind of manga in which two romantic rivals settle their differences with a high-stakes tennis match—in front of the whole school, of course—and characters state their intentions in a bald fashion: “I won’t lose you to him,” Arimi cheerfully warns Miki over a sundae. (A sundae!) Yoshizumi’s ability to balance the absurd with the everyday lends an air of plausibility to these scenarios; there’s always a kernel of emotional truth to the interactions between the characters, even when they’re dreaming up soap-worthy schemes.

Though the plotting is intricate, the artwork is clean and unfussy; backgrounds, hairdos, and clothing are rendered in a style that keeps the focus on the characters’ faces and body language. Miki has big, dramatic reactions to everything, but Yoshizumi avoids too much deformation or mugging to convey Miki’s distress. More surprising is how gracefully the artwork has aged, aside from an errant headband here and there; it wouldn’t look out of place at Barnes & Noble in 2023. (Well, that’s not entirely true; Yuu has a major case of 90s Shojo Prince Hair™, notable for its height and for the artful way it flops to one side of his face.)

All of this is to say that I enjoyed Marmalade Boy waaaaaaaaaay more than I expected, given my advanced age and my strong preference for stories about, y’know, adults. I cheerfully recommend it to anyone looking to recapture the feeling of reading their first shojo manga, or the palpable excitement of being a manga fan in the early 2000s, when Tokyopop published these kind of stories by the truckfull. Recommended.

MARMALADE BOY: COLLECTOR’S EDITION, VOL. 1 • BY WATARU YOSHIZUMI • TRANSLATED BY AMBER TAMOSAITIS • ADAPTED BY KRISTA GRANDY • LETTERING BY JENNIFER SKARUPA • SEVEN SEAS • RATED TEEN+ 

Filed Under: Manga, Manga Critic, REVIEWS Tagged With: Romance/Romantic Comedy, Seven Seas, shojo

The Angel Next Door Spoils Me Rotten, Vol. 5

March 1, 2023 by Sean Gaffney

By Saekisan and Hanekoto. Released in Japan as “Otonari no Tenshi-sama ni Itsu no Ma ni ka Dame Ningen ni Sareteita Ken” by GA Bunko. Released in North America by Yen On. Translated by Nicole Wilder.

There is a trope sometimes known as Moonlighting Syndrome, named after the 80s TV show, which refers to a series failing because the romantic couple got together and all the tension was removed from the show. Leaving aside that this is not at all why Moonlighting failed, I think it’s a trope that is honored more in the breach than in the observance. It also depends on the genre. If this were a standard harem comedy, with Amane attracting the love of five or six different girls, then the one where he picks one would definitely be the final volume. Fortunately, this is not that, it’s a syrupy sweet relationship book. In fact, the thing that separates this from the pack is how long it’s actually taken Amane and Mahiru to get together. But at last Mahiru has managed to convey her feelings and the two of them are dating, and so now we can finally answer the age old question the above trope asks: now what?

Well, first of all, they’ve got to let the school know that they’re dating. OK, they don’t HAVE to do this, but given how much they accidentally flirt with each other constantly now, it will become rapidly apparent anyway. Surprisingly, it goes very smoothly – Amane is serious and withdrawn rather than a “loser protagonist”, so doesn’t get as much backlash as expected for dating the Angel of the school. Plus she’ll kill anyone who tries to get on his case about it with an angelic (fake) smile. After this there’s two more important relationship goals to conquer. Going to the local pool, which will involve swimsuits and attractive bodies. And going back home to visit Amane’s parents, which will involve a lot of Amane getting teased, but also an encounter that will hopefully let him close the book on his past trauma.

Generally speaking, whenever you have these “my personality is broken because of kids in my past”, you are inevitably going to meet those kids again. So the question is will it be the “it turns out we were really sad about what we did and want to apologize” version or the “no, we really are massive assholes” version. Angel Next Door takes the latter tack, and it’s probably for the best. Amane’s psychological damage has been what’s held the romance back in the first place, so having it be due to a misunderstanding wouldn’t have worked. That said, instead of a past trauma, we have a new enemy for readers: Amane and Mahiru’s own innate pureness. It takes the entire volume for them to get around to a kiss on the lips, and you get the sense that any sexual activity will be long after this series has finished. This is syrupy sweet romance, but that means you have to put up with them being two massive cinnamon rolls.

So still decent, if you can put up with the two leads being gaga over each other but rarely getting past the “holding hands” part.

Filed Under: angel next door spoils me rotten, REVIEWS

Alya Sometimes Hides Her Feelings in Russian, Vol. 2

February 28, 2023 by Sean Gaffney

By Sunsunsun and Momoco. Released in Japan as “Tokidoki Bosotto Russia-go de Dereru Tonari no Alya-san” by Kadokawa Sneaker Bunko. Released in North America by Yen On. Translated by Matthew Rutsohn.

When this was licensed, I jokingly called it “The Angel Next Door Spoils Me Russian”, and my review of the first volume talks about this being in that “syrupy sweet romance” genre, but this second volume seems to have shed a lot of that, and it feels much more like a standard romcom now, complete with other potential romantic interests and a better look at Masachika’s backstory that shows it was not, in fact, as normal and mundane as I thought it was. Basically, the first volume was a bigger success than the author expected, o now we have to go back and make things a bit harder for our couple. Admittedly, given Alya’s deep embarrassment at, well, anything, that’s not too hard. The goal for the series seems to have changed as well, going from “get this tsundere girl to admit she likes the guy” to “get the guy to take up what he had abandoned and also kick his family in the teeth”. Which, yes, may include his sister, who’s happy to play the villain.

The last book ended with Masachika deciding to help Alya become student council president, and most of this book is about the fallout from that decision, as a lot of people have feelings about it. There’s Yuki, who is conflicted, but mostly seems to be happy that Alya has finally gotten Masachika to care about something again, even if it isn’t Yuki. There’s Ayano, who is Yuki’s maid (and used to be Masachika’s), and who is mostly comedy relief but also feels a bit betrayed by Masachika abandoning Yuki. And there’s Sayaka, the girl that Yuki and Masachika beat our for the student council in middle school, who is furious with Alya for using her looks and feminine wiles to steal Masachika away from the OTP. (Said OTP being his blood-related sister, I remind you, which is why he finds this so baffling.) Clearly there’s only one thing left to do. Debate.

This is decent. There’s one line from Ayano that I could very much have done without (I mentioned it on Twitter), but for the most part she’s an amusing “ninja maid” addition to the cast, and I hope she gains actual depth. As for Masachika, it’s now clear that his issues are not just “my parents split up”, but that he was the scion, and deliberately abandoned that role, pushing it onto his sister and adapting a “whatever” personality that everyone around him hates. Alya has been the only one who can really get him to break out of that, and he’s also proving to be the best thing for Alya in return, giving her confidence and the drive to succeed in her goals. (She too has a sister sacrificing things for her – the series is not ashamed to have its thematic parallels hit you in the face.)

So they’re a good couple… except they’re not a couple yet, and this series being the kind it is, I expect that won’t change soon. But will we have the student council election next time? If you like romcoms, this is solid.

Filed Under: alya sometimes hides her feelings in russian, REVIEWS

Pick of the Week: Long Awaited Volumes

February 27, 2023 by Katherine Dacey, Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Ash Brown and Anna N Leave a Comment

KATE: Holy smokes–a new volume of Versailles of the Dead?! In 2023?! I reviewed the first volume in 2018. File this under Better Late Than Never, I guess. It’s not the best zombie manga I ever read, but it definitely earns style points for its outrageous plotting and gorgeous costumes; the undead never looked better!

SEAN: One of the “this will never get a full release in English” titles now finally has a full release in English, and it’s an excellent one as well. The final volume of Urusei Yatsura is my pick.

MICHELLE: It’s The Invisible Man and His Soon-to-Be Wife for me. They had me at “detective agency.”

ASH: I certainly interested in The Invisible Man and His Soon-to-Be Wife, but I’ll be joining Kate this week in picking Versailles of the Dead. It’s an odd zombie manga, but it’s a stylish one.

ANNA: I’m going for The Invisible Man and His Soon-to-Be Wife, as it sounds most intriguing.

Filed Under: PICK OF THE WEEK

The Disowned Queen’s Consulting Detective Agency

February 27, 2023 by Sean Gaffney

By Sasara Nagase and Hatipisuwan. Released in Japan as “Kandō Sareta no de Tantei-ya Hajimemasu! Jitsu wa Bōkoku no Joōda Nante Naisho Desu” by Earth Star Novels. Released in North America by J-Novel Heart. Translated by Joshua Douglass-Molloy.

Sarasa Nagase is having a pretty good year. I’m the Villainess, So I’m Taming the Final Boss is ongoing both here and in Japan, and had a mildly successful anime. The Do-Over Damsel Conquers the Dragon Emperor is also ongoing in Japan, and will be coming out here from Cross Infinite World in a month or so. And then there’s this one-shot, which might become a series, about a young woman whose life starts off in a very familiar (for readers) way but then very quickly goes off the rails. In fact, the best part of this book may be the way that it slowly squeezes out backstory bit by bit. Now, you might say “Sean, the very beginning of the book has her conversing with her talking magical hat”, and you’d be right, but even so, I was expecting a bit more standard villainess stuff than this ended up being. I suppose villainess is like isekai now – you use it to get readers.

The book opens with Octavia, the young heir to the earldom, being kicked out of her family home for being illegitimate – or so it’s claimed. Octavia herself is pretty blase about the whole thing, mostly as she knows that her destiny lies elsewhere. She was raised by her late grandmother, who has just died (which prompts the disowning) but when she lived was a famous detective. Now Octavia is off to the big city to go live in her grandmother’s house filled with mysterious items… that is if she’s not ambushed on the way there. Fortunately, she runs into a charming and suspicious young man, Raven. Unfortunately, she also meets a charming and suspicious Phantom Thief, Crow. These two are absolutely not the same person, and you’d be a fool to think so. Plus there’s no evidence. In any case, together, they fight crime!

Actually, they don’t fight crime. Octavia is a magical detective, and her main job is to find Imperial Heirlooms and register them with her magic hat before they become Demonic Heirlooms, which can wreak havoc. And honestly, there’s only one actual case, which involves a little girl and her supposedly cursed doll. The first third of the book is about Octavia escaping her family and setting up shop, and the last third is about the family trying to destroy her (and failing, because this is not a downer sort of book). It’s decent – Raven/Crow is not really the sort of shoujo boyfriend that I enjoy, but I can tolerate him. Octavia is balanced between “serious minded” and “a bit flakey”, perhaps a bit more towards the serious, but she’s entertaining. There is also a police inspector, who has the only accent in the entire book, and it’s very distracting. He doesn’t go so far as to say “Crikey, guv’ner”, but it’s close.

There might be more in the series – the webnovel finished, but this only came out last year, so who knows? As a one-shot, though, it’s a good one for those who like ladies doing cool things, though villainess fans might not find enough here to satisfy them.

Filed Under: disowned queen's consulting detective agency, REVIEWS

Chitose Is in the Ramune Bottle, Vol. 3

February 26, 2023 by Sean Gaffney

By Hiromu and raemz. Released in Japan as “Chitose-kun wa Ramune Bin no Naka” by Gagaga Bunko. Released in North America by Yen On. Translated by Evie Lund.

One problem I have with reading light novels that are “high school romcoms”, is that I tend to regard them as taking place in “generic Tokyo suburb”. That’s actually rarely the case. There are a few exceptions – My Youth Romantic Comedy Is Wrong As I Expected will not shut up about Chiba long enough for me to put it anywhere else – but most of them fall into “generic place”. So I was a bit surprised with the subplot here, which is that our hero and heroine-of-the-book head off from their “big city”, Fukui, which has about 275,000 people, to Tokyo, which is 14 million people. I was even more surprised with the message that the story was giving us, which is that the big city can be awesome, despite its huge number of people and occasional creep. If your dream requires you to be in the biggest city in Japan, go there. Because chasing dreams is important. Even if it means giving up on a potential series-killing romance.

Our cast of second years are getting guidance from their seniors as to what to expect in regards to future plans, and one of those seniors is Chitose’s friend/crush Asuka. She has a dream of being an editor at a Japanese publishing house, but there’s just no way that you can do something like that in someplace like Fukui. Her parents are also dead set against it, and want her to become a librarian or civil servant. Chitose is determined to help her, even though he knows that her heading to Tokyo likely means that any relationship they might have would be dead in the water. So he comes up with an idea: visit Tokyo, and see what it’s really like, to find out if it’s overwhelming to her. Of course, to do that, he’s going to have to essentially kidnap her.

The back half of this book finally gives us the full backstory, with one exception, of Chitose, and we also see why much of it was elided – it was being saved for the book focusing on Asuka. I can certainly see why the author is writing Asuka out of the series (though she doesn’t quite leave for Tokyo yet, as it’s still months before graduation), as in a series that prides itself on Chitose balancing his “harem” of four girls fairly equally, Asuka is simply too powerful. That said, there are a few flaws here, The book is much longer than it needed to be, for one. And Asuka gaining all of her strength and coolness that we’ve seen in the series to date by essentially imitating the boy she liked may not sit well with some viewers, though Chitose is quick to point out that that sort of imitation is what everyone does, and eventually it becomes second nature.

In any case, Asuka may not be in Tokyo yet, but she and Chitose have “broken up”, which leaves him free to solve someone else’s problems in the next book. And that also seems to answer my question from last time about the plot of this series: Chitose solves problems, at great expense (his own).

Filed Under: chitose is in the ramune bottle, REVIEWS

Outbreak Company: Gaiden

February 25, 2023 by Sean Gaffney

By Ichiro Sakaki and Yuugen. Released in Japan by Kodansha Light Novels. Released in North America by J-Novel Club. Translated by Kevin Steinbach.

This book feels like an apology, frankly. I was very grumpy with the final volume of the series, and judging by some of the reviews I saw on Amazon Japan, fans of the series there were also unhappy. So now we get the “Gaiden”, or “Side Story”, volume of the series, the actual final volume, and it feels like it’s giving fans what they wanted all along. Well, at least the first half is. The second half of the series is there to highlight Minori, who has always been the least developed character in the series (insert joke about her breast size here), but this final chapter allows us to see a BIT more into her inner psyche and how she really feels about things. Unfortunately, it’s still Outbreak Company, and she’s still Minori, so in the end the plot cannot quiet thread the serious needle and goes back to its running gag. But it tried. The first half of the book does a better job, and uses “fantasy world” as a way to resolve the love interests.

After the events of the final volume (minus the epilogue, which is thankfully ignored), Shinichi returns to the castle… to find Petralka announcing that she’s marrying him, and the wedding will be as soon as possible. Given that he struggled to make a choice and chose Myusel, he’s a little pole-axed by this. The nobility doesn’t like it either… and might also be the reason Petralka is pushing things. After this, we see the secondary pairing, as Hikaru very publicly confesses to Elvia… who still loves Shinichi, and is not really sure how romance works to begin with. A lot of awkwardness follows. Finally, a suitor arrives to marry Garius whether he likes it or not, despite his sexual preferences. Can he find a replacement? And what are BL lover Minori’s thoughts on all this?

Gonna be honest, even though I felt the book was trying to “fix” the last book, it only partly succeeds. The first chapter works best, being Shinichi focused, and with a good intrigue sideplot. I don’t mind the polycule resolution, and obviously the three of them don’t mind it either, though that’s more because we’ve seen it a LOT more in recent light novels. The Hikaru and Elvia story is hampered (as is the Minori story) by multiple narrators, and it’s not always clear who’s meant to be our POV until several paragraphs in. It also feels a bit too quickly resolved. As for the Minori story, as with a number of stories focusing on her in this series, it looks like it’s going to finally be serious and sober, and then heads down into BL alley again. Which is fine, it’s her gag. It just felt a bit too jokey for me. And the treatment of trans and gay issues is… attempted, I will grant you.

So a side story that’s highly variable, which I’m OK with because it’s a side story. A must read for Petralka fans, but for the rest of us it’s another reminder that this series was excellent and annoying in just about equal measure.

Filed Under: outbreak company, REVIEWS

The Manga Review: RIP Leiji Matsumoto

February 24, 2023 by Katherine Dacey Leave a Comment

On February 20th, Leiji Matsumoto passed away at the age of 85. Matsumoto made his professional debut in the pages of Manga Shonen magazine in 1954, dabbling in a variety of genres over the next fifteen years before discovering his true calling: space operas. In the 1970s, he directed Space Battleship Yamato, and penned some of his most influential work, including Space Captain Harlock, Galaxy Express 999, and Queen Emeraldas. In later years, he collaborated with Daft Punk on a series of music videos for their 2001 album Discovery, and rebooted Space Captain Harlock with illustrator Koichi Shimahoshi. Anime News Network, the BBC, ICv2, and The Japan Times have all published thoughtful reflections on Matsumoto’s legacy, as did translator Zach Davisson, who shared vivid memories of watching Yamato on American television in the 1970s:

As a child of the 70s/80s, one of the reasons why Leiji Matsumoto’s works hit so hard is because at the time, boys were not allowed to have emotions. They could be brave, or adventurous, but not sad. Not emotional. Love was not something you saw in Saturday morning cartoons. (1)

— Zack Davisson @ECCC E-10 (@ZackDavisson) February 20, 2023

NEWS AND VIEWS

Over at Comicosity, Allen Thomas dedicates his latest Health and Inclusivity column to Okura’s I Think Our Son Is Gay. “I appreciate this manga because it is a helpful guide for approaching the queer and trans kids in our lives,” he observes. “Hell, it’s great for cishet kids too because they can see what their queer and trans peers may likely experience in school, at home, or in life in general. This manga also shows us how to be there for the people in our lives by responding to their needs without projecting our own.” [Comicosity]

Anime Feminist has compiled a directory “spotlighting Black writers, artists, and media outlets that cover or create art inspired by Japanese pop culture.” [Anime Feminist]

If you’ve been curious about The Girl Who Can’t Get a Girlfriend, click over to Honey’s Anime to read Brett Michael Orr’s interview with author Hiranishi Mieri. [Honey’s Anime]

Seven Seas just announced that it will be publishing Chi: On the Movements of the Earth, Breakfast with My Two-Tailed Cat, Dungeon Friends Forever, and I Married My Female Friend. All four series are slated for a late 2023 release. [Seven Seas]

Asher and Ashley revisit an early work from the CLAMP canon: Man of Many Faces. [Shojo & Tell]

There’s a reason you probably haven’t heard of Tricks Dedicated to Witches. [Shonen Flop]

Wondering what to read in 2023? Book Riot has you covered with a breakdown of the best completed, ongoing, and upcoming shonen manga. [Book Riot]

John Holt and Teppei Fukuda translate yet another essay by manga critic Natsume Fusanosuke: “Pig Gourd: The Meaning of Tezuka’s Playing Around with Form.” The essay, which was originally published in 1992, focuses “on Osamu Tezuka’s trademark Pig Gourd character, who will pop up or even decimate panel borders to show not only Tezuka’s embarrassment at being unable to resist a sight gag but also his bold desire to play with panel possibilities.” [Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics]

REVIEWS

Erica Friedman bestows a rare 9 out 10 stars to The Girl Who Can’t Get a Girlfriend, “a beautiful, heart-breaking and hilarious book about queer life and love.”

New and Noteworthy

  • Assorted Entanglements, Vol. 1 (Brett Michael Orr, Honey’s Anime)
  • Barbarities, Vol. 1 (Danica Davidson, Otaku USA)
  • Choujin X, Vol. 1 (MrAJCosplay, ANN)
  • The Evil Secret Society of Cats, Vol. 1 (A Library Girl’s Familiar Diversions)
  • Gap Papa: Daddy at Work and at Home, Vol. 1 (Danica Davidson, Otaku USA)
  • The Girl Who Can’t Get a Girlfriend (Tony Yao, Drop-In to Manga)
  • Hirano and Kagiura, Vol. 1 (Kevin T. Rodriguez, The Fandom Post)
  • If My Favorite Pop Idol Made It to the Budokan, I Would Die, Vol. 1 (Erica Friedman, Okazu)
  • If My Favorite Pop Idol Made It to the Budokan, I Would Die, Vol. 1 (Demelza, Anime UK News)
  • Insomniacs After School, Vol. 1 (Renee Scott, Good Comics for Kids)
  • Is Love the Answer? (Josh Piedra, The Outerhaven)
  • Love’s In Sight!, Vol. 1 (Brett Michael Orr, Honey’s Anime)
  • Mermaid Scales and the Town of Sand (Rebecca Silverman, ANN)
  • The Princess of Convenient Plot Devices, Vol. 1 (Danica Davidson, Otaku USA)
  • Red Cage (Adam Symchuk, Asian Movie Pulse)
  • SCRAMBLUES (MrAJCosplay, ANN)
  • Show-Ha Shoten, Vol. 1 (King Baby Duck, Boston Bastard Brigade)

Complete and Ongoing Series

  • Boruto: Naruto Next Generations, Vol. 16 (Josh Piedra, The Outerhaven)
  • Chainsaw Man, Vol. 2 (A Library Girl’s Familiar Diversions)
  • Chainsaw Man, Vol. 3 (A Library Girl’s Familiar Diversions)
  • Dr. STONE, Vol. 2 (A Library Girl’s Familiar Diversions)
  • Fruits Basket Another, Vol. 4 (Jaime, Yuri Stargirl)
  • I Want to Be a Wall, Vol. 2 (Rebecca Silverman, ANN)
  • Love at Fourteen, Vol. 12 (Krystallina, The OASG)
  • Love at Fourteen, Vol. 12 (Jaime, Yuri Stargirl)
  • Moriarty the Patriot, Vol. 10 (King Baby Duck, Boston Bastard Brigade)
  • My Isekai Life: I Gained a Second Character Class and Became the Strongest Sage in the World!, Vol. 4 (Demelza, Anime UK News)
  • Sasaki and Miyano, Vol. 7 (Sarah, Anime UK News)
  • Tsubaki-chou Lonely Planet, Vol. 2 (Krystallina, The OASG)

Filed Under: FEATURES

Bofuri: I Don’t Want to Get Hurt, So I’ll Max Out My Defense, Vol. 8

February 24, 2023 by Sean Gaffney

By Yuumikan and KOIN. Released in Japan as “Itai no wa Iya nano de Bōgyoryoku ni Kyokufuri Shitai to Omoimasu” by Kadokawa Books. Released in North America by Yen On. Translated by Andrew Cunningham.

I think the author knows why we’re here by now. The reader is here to see if Maple will do something crazy (yes), if she’ll get new abilities that are bizarre and yet very adaptable (yes), and if she’ll finally make out with Sally (no, though the two do go on a date where they ride a horse together). But we do have a lot of other members of Maple Tree, and at times the guild does sort of feel like “Maple, Sally, and the rest”. This book, more than any other before it, looks to fix that. Some get more attention than others (sorry, Chrome, there’s really not much we can do with your type), but for the most part everyone gets a spotlight that helps to show off one thing: they deserve to be in Maple Tree because they, too, are an eccentric powerhouse. The guild has a reputation for weirdos, and it is 100% leaning into that.

There’s a new floor, and a new goal: everyone’s getting their own companion monster. This means that Maple and Sally are sitting this one out for the most part, as they got theirs way back at the start of the series – in fact, the mods likely put this in the game to fix that. So everyone goes off to quests. Mai and Yui go hunting bears, which is difficult giving they’re living in a glass house… erm, cannon. (Sorry, Radiohead got into my head there for some reason.) Kanade finds an NPC he’s never seen before, which leads him to battle a slime with unique abilities. Kasumi takes on a night unkillable snake. Chrome goes on a long game of “this hint leads to this next hint” etc till he battles undead pirate ghosts. And Iz gets Maple and Mii to help her gather enough materials to make something to get the favor of crafting spirits. The reward for all of this is an event where they can kill monsters and/or players to advance, and Maple Tree are absolutely terrifying.

So yes, the anime has passed the books again, so in case you wondered: this is the one with the tentacles. That said, I think it’s Maple’s toxic monster swamp, as well as her hilarious actions near the end of the book, that are the highlight, and I hope we see it animated well when the series returns from COVID hiatus. Elsewhere, I enjoyed seeing Iz showing off that she’s not just support gal by effectively napalming an entire forest. Kanade… look, I know Anime News Network made this joke already, but there’s no getting around it: Kanade now has his own clone to bang. The smug smirks they each have at the end of the scene only adds to that impression. And I also liked seeing how the pets worked with the Twins, who are both Maple-ettes only with offense – a mild buff becomes a huge, huge advantage. They can now splatter most anything.

So yeah, another fun volume. If you’re wondering if the anime cut a lot from here, well, a fair amount. Anime-onlies who think the series is rushing should definitely read the books. The rest of us will enjoy Maple’s quest for octopus.

Filed Under: bofuri, REVIEWS

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