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Discussion, Resources, Roundtables, & Reviews

Unshelved

AX License Roundup

July 6, 2014 by Sean Gaffney

There was a lot of stuff going on at Anime Expo 2014, and who better to bring it to you than someone who wasn’t there at all? Probably for the best, as I hear many manga bloggers were trapped in endless lines, unable to get into panels. As is the nature of large cons; I’m sure I’ll have similar issues at NYCC.

Let’s start with the largest set of new announcements, from Viz Media. Amazon had already blown the secret on the re-release of the new JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure, but it’s now official. We get the first arc in omnibus format, here in NA for the first time, with color pages and new cover art. The 2nd arc will debut digitally at the same time. The 3rd arc, which was the only one previously released over here, gets a digital release starting this week.

jojos1

JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure is probably the one major, heavily influential Shonen Jump series we still hadn’t really seen over here, 3rd arc aside. It’s known for its fights, its ultraviolence, its homoeroticism, but most of all, it’s known for being weird. The Bizarre isn’t just for show. It also has most of its major cast named after rock bands to a greater or lesser degree though, given what happened with Bastard!!, we may see some of those names romanized differently to avoid attention being paid. (What, no one remembers Bastard!!? Just me? Right, moving on…)

Viz also announced Baraou no Souretsu, AKA Requiem for the Rose King. From the creator of Otomen, this does not look like it will be nearly as silly as that title, but should have a bit more depth. It runs in Akita Shoten’s shoujo magazine Princess, and is a retelling of the Richard III story, with Richard being intersex. Which is quite interesting given many of the themes of Richard III. I assume, like most retellings, this will follow Shakespeare’s history rather than genuine history.

There are new omnibuses coming for Yu-Gi-Oh and Gyo. Nothing to add there.

Later in the con, Shojo Beat had its own panel to announce things. The biggest news there was probably that a new, one-off chapter of Vampire Knight will be released by Viz digitally this fall. A lot of series, particularly Hakusensha series, have these one-shot or ‘after the end’ stories, and they aren’t always picked up by the licensor, partly as they may not actually be collected in Japan as they’re only one or two chapters. So this is very nice to see.

meteor prince

Omukae Desu was a suitably odd shoujo title from the CMX days, and Pearl Pink was put out by Tokyopop. Now we get a 3rd short but sweet title from Meca Tanaka, who may be better known to fans as the creator of Faster Than a Kiss, her most popular series. That was likely never licensed here due to its student/teacher romance. We are getting a cute new series, Otome to Meteo, which will be two volumes. Translating to Meteor Prince, it would appear to feature an eccentric male lead and a heroine who has to keep up with everything, like many shoujo series. It sounds fun.

Lastly, Momochi-san Chi no Ayakashi Ouji (The Demon Prince of Momochi House) is by Aya Shouoto, author of the upcoming Kiss of the Rose Princess. That ran in Kadokawa Shoten’s Asuka magazine, and so does this title. It appears to contain everything that’s hot these days: it has very attractive yokai, it has a reverse harem, it has exorcisms and spirituality. If you enjoyed Demon Love Spell, Kamisama Kiss, or any of the ‘sexy yokai boyfriend’ genre, this seems to be right up your street.

Next up, Dark Horse had a manga panel. The biggest announcement here was not a new acquisition, but more of a reassurance. It’s been a year and a half since we last saw Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Service, and fans with long memories (Translucent, anyone?) were getting worried. We now know that not only will we get a 14th volume soon, but that the first 12 will also come out in omnibuses for those who never saw the series in the first place. It can be squicky and horror filled, but it’s also really terrific, with an oddball sense of humor and a surprisingly political bent. This is news to get excited about.

pantystocking

The new license of note was Panty & Stocking With Garterbelt, a one-shot manga based on the cult classic anime. It ran in Kadokawa’s Young Ace, and certainly has a core audience who will be excited. I never did get around to seeing the anime, perhaps I should. There will also be a Satoshi Kon artbook (DH licensed two Kon mangas recently), and an omnibuses re-release of Oh My Goddess, which may be the first one that I don’t end up getting, because I’ve now bought this series four times, and I really don’t need a 5th. But for newbies who wonder how this got to 46+ volumes, it’s a great entry point.

Taking a brief break from manga to discuss a visual novel dear to my heart, which is to say Higurashi: When They Cry. Mangagamer had a panel at AX to discuss the upcoming re-release of the game on the Steam platform. The first arc should be available by the end of the year, and will apparently feature all-new sprites making their debut. A comparison between the original sprites drawn by Ryukishi07 (and used by Mangagamer in the initial release), the PS2 sprites, and Mangagamer’s new sprites was quickly done.

comparison

As you can see, the original sprites are a bit crude, but filled with emotion. They also feature the famous “mitten hands”. The PS2 sprites look more polished, but were also thought to be a bit dull compared to the originals. (Also, Mangagamer likely is unable to acquire the rights to use them – they also don’t have the rights to the ‘PS2 Exclusive’ arcs with the alternate, more bittersweet ending.) The new MG sprites look a bit overly cute – ‘big head small neck’ syndrome is at work here – but honestly, all three are designed to look adorable in that moe anime way. No doubt everyone has their favorites, but we shall see how it goes when we get the actual release.

Back to manga. Vertical had a panel on Friday, and had one announcement, but it was a good one. A 400+-page collection of Satoshi Kon’s short stories, Yume no Kaseki (A Fossil of a Dream) is due out in the summer of 2015. Tropic of the Sea was an offbeat, hard to get into, but ultimately rewarding read, and I anticipate this will be equally thrilling.

maria1

Lastly, we have two new titles from Kodansha Comics – though one of them you can already see on Crunchyroll’s manga site. First off, we have Junketsu no Maria, a series by the author of Moyashimon that ran in good!Afternoon, one of Kodansha’s many seinen titles. Titles Maria the Virgin Witch over here, it takes place during the Hundred Years War, and has a girl our to make peace by dint of magic, seductive succubuses, or any other means at her disposal. An archangel, Michael, is sent to stop her and keep history on its proper course. Likely with 100% less bacteria than his other series, hopefully it has as much oddball humor and heart.

And A Silent Voice, which as I said has been running on Crunchyroll’s online site, will get a print release this sprint. Koe no Katachi is about a deaf girl who is bullied in elementary school. Now a little older and a little wiser, the bully wants to apologize to her in high school. The word heartwarming was made for manga like this, and it should be a real treat to see.

So what are you most excited about from these announcements?

Filed Under: NEWS, UNSHELVED

Bookshelf Overload: June 2014

July 4, 2014 by Ash Brown

Compared to the ridiculousness of the last few months, the number of my June acquisitions is actually quite reasonable. For the most part I stuck to preorders, though there were a few splurges, too. As for out-of-print finds, I picked up the first five volumes of Naoki Yamamoto’s Dance Till Tomorrow (for some reason my library had the last part of the series but not the first part) and Venus Wars, Volume 1 by Yoshikazu Yasuhiko. (More of the series was actually released in English as floppies but never collected; if I like the first volume, I might try to track them down.) There were two preordered manga that I was particularly excited to get my hands on in June–Ayano Yamane’s Crimson Spell, Volume 4 and Showa: A History of Japan, 1939-1944 by Shigeru Mizuki–but my favorite thing from last month was probably Kazune Kawahara and Aruko’s My Love Story!!, Volume 1. In-depth reviews of books from June’s haul that you can expect to see soon will include my thoughts on Dan Mazur and Alexander Danner’s Comics: A Global History, 1968 to the Present, which is pretty great, as well as the Angels’ Border manga, which collects two side stories to Koushun Takami’s cult classic novel Battle Royale written by the author himself. I don’t buy anime as much as I used to, mostly relying on streaming services, but I definitely needed to own Flowers of Evil. Technically, it wasn’t released until July, but my copy arrived early. The first box set of Dear Brother (which I helped to crowdfund) is now available, too!

Manga!
Battle Royale: Angels’ Border written by Koushun Takami, illustrated by Mioko Ohnishi and Youhei Oguma
A Centaur’s Life, Volume 3 by Kei Murayama
Crimson Spell, Volume 4 by Ayano Yamane
Dance Till Tomorrow, Volumes 1-5 by Naoki Yamamoto
Dengeki Daisy, Volume 14 by Kyousuke Motomi
From the New World, Volume 4 written by Yusuke Kishi, illustrated by Toru Oikawa
Gakuen Polizi, Volume 1 by Milk Morinaga
Genshiken: Second Season, Volume 4 by Shimoku Kio
Honey Darling by Norikazu Akira
Knights of Sidonia, Volume 9 by Tsutomu Nihei
Missions of Love, Volume 7 by Ema Toyama
Mobile Suit Gundam: The Origin, Volume 6: To War by Yoshikazu Yasuhiko
My Love Story!!, Volume 1 written by Kazune Kawahara and illustrated by Aruko
New Lone Wolf and Cub, Volume 1 written by Kazuo Koike, illustrated by Hideki Mori
The Seven Deadly Sins, Volume 1 by Nakaba Suzuki
Showa: A History of Japan, 1939-1944 by Shigeru Mizuki
Venus Wars, Volume 1 by Yoshikazu Yasuhiko

Comics!
Arena, Chapter 2 by Himitsu Studio
Escapo by Paul Pope
Fearful Hunter by Jon Macy
Forming by Jesse Moynihan

Nonfiction!
Comics: A Global History, 1968 to the Present by Dan Mazur and Alexander Danner

Anime!
Dear Brother, Box 1 directed by Osamu Dezaki
Flowers of Evil directed by Hiroshi Nagahama

Film!
Bushido Man: Seven Deadly Battles directed by Takanori Tsujimoto
K-20: The Fiend with Twenty Faces directed by Shimako Satō

Filed Under: Bookshelf Overload, UNSHELVED

Manga Giveaway: Juné Manga Giveaway Winner

July 2, 2014 by Ash Brown

FlutterAnd the winner of the Juné Manga Giveaway is…Muteee!

As the winner, Muteee will be receiving a copy of Flutter by Momoko Tenzen as published by Juné, one of Digital Manga’s boys’ love and yaoi imprints. Because it was June and the wordplay amused me, I decided to hold a Juné giveaway, asking those who were participating to tell me a little about their favorite Juné manga (if they had one). After ten years of publishing and over four hundred volumes of manga and novels, there are quite a few Juné titles to choose from. Because I enjoy making lists, I’ve gathered everyone’s responses (and added a few additional favorites of my own) below. Check out the giveaway comments if you want all the details, though!

Some favorite Juné manga:
Café Latte Rhapsody by Toko Kawai
Caramel by Puku Okuyama
Cut by Toko Kawai
Deadlock written by Saki Aida, illustrated by Yuu Takashina
Dear Myself by Eiki Eiki
Don’t Say Anymore, Darling by Fumi Yoshinaga
Hero Heel by Makoto Tateno
Gorgeous Carat Galaxy by You Higuri
I Give to You by Maki Ebishi
In the Walnut by Toko Kawai
Invisible Boy by Hotaru Odagiri
Kiss Blue by Keiko Kinoshita
Little Butterfly by Hinako Takanaga
Loveholic by Toko Kawai
Ludwig II by You Higuri
Maiden Rose by Fusanosuke Inariya
Men of Tattoos by Yuiji Aniya
The Moon and the Sandals by Fumi Yoshinaga
Mr. Mini Mart by Junko
Necratoholic by Maguro Wasabi
No Touching at All by Kou Yoneda
Only Serious about You by Kai Asou
Only the Ring Finger Knows written by Satoru Kannagi and illustrated by Hotaru Odagiri
Our Everlasting by Toko Kawai
Rin! written by Satoru Kannagi and illustrated by Yukine Honami
Same Cell Organism by Sumomo Yumeka
Seven Days written by Venio Tachibana and illustrated by Rihito Takarai
Solfege by Fumi Yoshinaga
Thirsty for Love written by Satosumi Takaguchi and illustrated by Yukine Honami
Time Lag written by Shinobu Gotoh, illustrated by Hotaru Odagiri
The Tyrant Falls in Love by Hinako Takanaga
Yellow by Makoto Tateno

Thank you to everyone who shared their favorites with me. There are a few manga on the above list that I actually haven’t yet read that I’ll need to track down now. Hope to see you all again for the next giveaway!

Filed Under: UNSHELVED Tagged With: Juné, manga, Momoko Tenzen

Seven Seas License roundup

June 17, 2014 by Sean Gaffney

Seven Seas has this odd habit of waiting till I do a post talking about new licenses and then revealing their own, partly to ensure they get noticed but mostly I suspect to annoy me. Still, they’ve announced four new titles for late this year into next year, so let’s see what they have.

scarlet

First, and least surprising, is the sequel to dance in the Vampire Bund, Scarlet Order, which runs in comic Flapper. Along with the alice books, Vampire Bund has been one of Seven Seas’s moneymakers, so it was a no brainer to get this one. It has vampires. And lolicon. And lolicon vampires!

Clay Lord is a relatively recent title from Ichijinsha’s Comic Zero-Sum, which means it’s sort of josei but technically sui generis. The story of a boy and his golem, this one may appeal to fans of Black Butler and similar stories.

evergreen

Evergreen is probably the title I’m most excited about, mostly because I’m very fond of Toradora!, which is by the same author. (As for the artist, after glancing through her other works, I think I will merely whistle and pass gracefully by.) I had actually expected to see Golden Time next, also by Takemiya, and also running in Dengeki Daioh, which serializes Evergreen and Toradora!. The plot description reminds me a bit of Book Girl, as it stars a male lead who’s closed off and reclusive due to some tragedy in his past. Instead of Touko, though, we get the class beauty helping him out.

Lastly, we have Hitomi-sensei no Hokenshitsu, which runs in the dreaded Comic Ryu. Given the monster success of Monster Musume, it’s not hard to see why Seven Seas went looking for other titles in this magazine, particularly this one, which also involves monsters and comedy. This looks a bit less skeevy than Monster Musume, and involves a cyclops nurse at a monster high school helping kids out with their problems, and the emphasis seems to be firmly on the comedy. I’d give it a shot.

What interests you most?

Filed Under: NEWS, UNSHELVED

A Mostly Yen License Roundup

June 13, 2014 by Sean Gaffney

Yen Press had a lot of license announcements today, and this post is mostly going to talk about those. But first.

Amazon blew a couple of Viz licenses the other day, though they were quickly taken down. One was not commented on, so I won’t either. The other, which Viz was forced to admit “Yes, we have it, wait till AX for details”, was the first arc of Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure. This legendary Shonen Jump manga has long been known over here in the States for its ridiculous powerups and battles, its sheer weirdness, the musical name jokes, and a truly ridiculous amount of not-quite-BL, to the point where the female fandom is huge, and it may even have been more influential than Slam Dunk or Saint Seiya in bringing in those fans to Jump. Viz had published the 3rd arc of the series (considered to be the most accessible) a while back, but it didn’t really sell well. But recent anime adaptations have brought it back into the limelight, and Viz is now going back to release the “Phantom Blood” arc, the first JoJo’s adventure. I suspect it will be the 3-volume re-release from the early 2000s, but we’ll wait for more details. In the meantime, get hyped. JoJo’s is addictive, fun, tragic, and ridiculous.

Now, let’s talk Yen Press and Yen On. First off, in already released news, I was pleased to see that the 2nd Magical Index light novel is scheduled for February 2015. This would point to the series being on a quarterly release, as opposed to SAO’s three times or Book Girl’s twice a year. Given the sheer SIZE of Index, this is likely necessary to keep fandom invested.

There are some more volumes of the Kingdom Hearts franchise that Yen is putting out! I’ve never really kept up with this series, but I know it was huge when Tokyopop put out the manga, and my guess is it’s still huge. Secret was also officially announced; it’s been coming out digitally in chapter format recently. it’s the latest from the author of Judge and Doubt, so my guess is it has a lot of dead teens.

akame1

Akame ga Kill! hails from Gangan Joker, a favorite target of Yen Press. Featuring an idealistic young man getting caught up in a hideous international conspiracy, it apparently has a very high body count, lots of assassins and psychopaths, and is filled with shonen GUTS. Sounds like it will fit right in alongside Higurashi and company.

Sword Art Online is just getting started, with its 3rd light novel, the first part of Fairy Dance, coming out this December. But Yen On has also just announced their license of the Progressive series, which began to come out 10 years after the original. This apparently retells the events of the first two books from Asuna’s perspective, showing a lot more of how she developed into the badass we bet at the start of the first SAO novel. They’ve also licensed the manga adaptation, which runs in Mediaworks’ Dengeki G’s magazine.

kagerou

Kagerou Days is selling like hotcakes, which is less surprising when you realize it’s a spinoff of the insanely popular Vocaloid franchise. Based on a series of songs, it’s been adapted into a light novel and a manga (which runs in Media Factory’s Comic Gene), its plot is about a shut-in who is forced to leave his apparently after getting sent a cyber-girl though an email. It is apparently far more interesting than it sounds, and an anime based off of it aired this spring.

Lastly, Yen have already licensed Sword Art Online (and Progressive) and Accel World, now we her they’re getting a new series of novels by the same author, which is not even out in Japan yet. It’s called Absolute Solitude, and will no doubt be exciting, whatever it is.

No, there’s no Baccano! license here, but lots of exciting stuff. Anything you plan to pick up?

Filed Under: NEWS, UNSHELVED

Manga Giveaway: Oi, Oishinbo! Winner

June 4, 2014 by Ash Brown

Oishinbo, A la Carte: Japanese CuisineAnd the winner of the Oi, Oishinbo! manga giveaway is…AshLynx!

As the winner, AshLynx will be receiving a copy of Oishinbo, A la Carte: Japanese Cuisine by Tetsu Kariya and Akira Hanasaki. Oishinbo is one of the most successful and well-known food manga out there (at least in Japan), so for this giveaway I asked that people tell me a little about their own favorite food manga. Check out the giveaway comments for everyone’s responses. As usually, I’ve also taken the giveaway as an opportunity to compile a list. Below you’ll find some food-centric manga, as well as a few manga where food isn’t the focus but still plays an important role.

Some of the food manga licensed in English:
Antique Bakery by Fumi Yoshinaga
The Drops of God written by Tadashi Agi and illustrated by Shu Okimoto
Eat For Your Life! by Shigeru Tsuchiyama
Food Wars!: Shokugeki no Soma written by Yuto Tsukuda, illustrated by Shun Saeki
Gente by Natsume Ono
Iron Wok Jan by Shinji Saijyo
Kitchen Princess written by Miyuki Kobayashi, illustrated by Natsumi Ando
Mixed Vegetables by Ayumi Komura
Moyasimon: Tale of Agriculture by Masayuki Ishikawa
Neko Ramen by Kenji Sonishi
Noodle Fighter Miki by Jun Sadogawa
Not Love but Delicious Foods Make Me So Happy! by Fumi Yoshinaga
Oishinbo, A la Carte written by Tetsu Kariya, illustrated by Akira Hanasaki
Project X: Cup Noodle written by Tadashi Kato, illustrated by Akira Imai
Ristorante Paradiso by Natsume Ono
Seiwa High School Bento Club! by Umitamako
Takasugi-San’s Obento by Nozomi Yanahara
Toriko by Mitsutoshi Shimabukuro
What Did You Eat Yesterday? by Fumi Yoshinaga
Yakitate!! Japan by Takashi Hashiguchi

I love food, and I love manga, so food manga is a great combination for me. Thank you to everyone who shared their favorites; now we all have something to tide us over until the next manga giveaway!

Filed Under: UNSHELVED Tagged With: Akira Hanasaki, manga, Oishinbo, Tetsu Kariya

Bookshelf Overload: May 2014

June 1, 2014 by Ash Brown

Not counting the big box of review copies that arrived at the very end of the month, May actually has the distinction of my comics acquisitions outnumbering my manga acquisitions for the month. This is partly due to the fact that I went to TCAF and came away with a lot of goodies. This included picking up the first volume of Hotblood!: A Centaur in the Old West by Toril Orlesky, which is one of my new favorite things, as well as est em’s doujinshi Carmen among many others. As for the preorders that I was particularly excited to receive in May: the third-to-last volume of Blade of the Immortal and the second volume of What Did You Eat Yesterday? were released (reviews to come very soon), as was the second volume of Gangsta, which is a series I’m really looking forward to reading more of. It wasn’t exactly a preorder, but Massive also recently released Caveman Guu by Jiraiya. It’s only sixteen pages, but it’s pretty great. (Caveman Guu will actually be included in Massive: Gay Erotic Manga and the Men Who Make It from Fantagraphics later this year, too.)

Manga!
Android Angels by Kosuke Kabaya
Attack on Titan: No Regrets, Volume 1 written by Gun Snark, illustrated by Hikaru Suruga
Blade of the Immortal, Volume 29: Beyond Good and Evil by Hiroaki Samura
Carmen by est em
Caveman Guu by Jiraiya
Clan of the Nakagamis, Volumes 1-2 by Homerun Ken
Devils and Realist, Volume 1 written by Madoka Takadono, illustrated by Utako Yukihiro
An Even More Beautiful Lie by Kei Kanai
Fairy Tail, Volume 38 by Hiro Mashima
Gangsta, Volume 2 by Kohske
Hard Rock by Akane Abe
Haunted House by Mitsukazu Mihara
Hetalia: Axis Powers, Volume 6 by Himaruya Hidekaz
Kine In! by est em
Monster Musume, Volume 3 by Okayado
Monster Soul, Volume 1 by Hiro Mashima
My Little Monster, Volume 2 by Robico
No. 6, Volume 7 by Hinoki Kino
Otomen, Volume 18 by Aya Kanno
Palepoli by Usamaru Furuya
Sankarea: Undying Love, Volume 7 by Mitsuru Hattori
Say I Love You, Volume 2 by Kanae Hazuki
The Seven Deadly Sins, Volume 2 by Nakaba Suzuki
Sherlock Bones, Volume 5 written by Yuma Ando, illustrated by Yuki Sato
Ultras by est em
What Did You Eat Yesterday?, Volume 2 by Fumi Yoshinaga
A Wish of My Sister by Masahiro Itosugi

Comics!
All You Need is Kill adapted by Nick Mamatas, illustrated by Lee Ferguson
Andre the Giant: Life and Legend by Box Brown
Before You Go by Denise Schroeder
By Chance or Providence by Becky Cloonan
Carciphona, Volumes 1-4 by Shilin Huang
Dinner Ditz by Alexis Cooke
Erogenous by Creative Alchemy
Finn and Charlie Are Hitched, Volume 4: Everyone Is Someone’s Fetish by Tony Breed
Foodwise by Tony Breed
Fujosports! by Various
Hotblood!: A Centaur in the Old West, Volume 1 by Toril Orlesky
The Less Than Epic Adventures of TJ and Amal, Volume 3: Ten Days of Perfect Tunes by E. K. Weaver
My New Fighting Technique is Unstoppable by David Rees
Oafanthology: A Collection of Wuvable Oaf Drawings & Stories edited by Ed Luce
This One Summer written by Mariko Tamaki, illustrated by Jillian Tamaki
The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys written by Gerard Way and Shaun Simon, illustrated by Becky Cloonan
Yuri Monogatari, Volume 2 by Various

Novels!
Malice by Keigo Higashino
You and the Pirates by Jocelyne Allen

Collections!
Akiba Anime Art Magazine, Volume 00
Granta: The Magazine of New Writing, Issue 127: Japan

Anime!
Yukikaze, Volumes 1-3 directed by Masahiko Ōkura

Filed Under: Bookshelf Overload, UNSHELVED

Viz Media Licenses Sailor Moon and Sailor Moon Crystal

May 16, 2014 by Sean Gaffney

We interrupt this manga blog to bring you important anime news.

Viz Media announced today at Anime Central that they have won everything ever and are our new gods, provided we pay them the appropriate tribute.

(cough)

What I meant was that viz Media announced at Anime Central that they have the license to the Sailor Moon anime, and will be releasing remastered Blu-Ray/DVD sets (season half-sets) starting this fall. It will also start streaming on Hulu Monday with the first four episodes subbed, with 2 per week to follow.

sailormoon

It is getting a new dub, cast to be announced.

It will be all 5 seasons, including Sailor Stars, as well as the 3 movies and assorted TV specials.

It is uncut.

It will come with various DVD extras.

They promise Haruka and Michiru will not be cousins.

Oh yes, they also announced… Sailor Moon Crystal, the reboot airing in Japan this summer. They have that as well.

So yes, as I said at the start, Viz Media announced today at Anime Central that they have won everything ever and are our new gods, provided we pay them the appropriate tribute. And by that I mean money. SPEND ALL THE MONEY ON SAILOR MOON.

Filed Under: NEWS, UNSHELVED

Manga Giveaway: Fullmetal Alchemist Giveaway Winner

May 7, 2014 by Ash Brown

Fullmetal Alchemist, Omnibus 1And the winner of the Fullmetal Alchemist Giveaway is…Naomi!

As the winner, Naomi will be receiving a copy of the first Fullmetal Alchemist omnibus released by Viz Media which collects the first three volumes of Hiromu Arakawa’s excellent manga. Because Fullmetal Alchemist is such a great series, and because Arakawa is such a great mangaka, for this giveaway I asked participants to tell me about some of their other favorite women mangaka. The responses were fantastic and I highly recommend reading the Fullmetal Alchemist Giveaway comments for all of the details. As usual, I also took the giveaway as an opportunity to compile a list. In this particular case, a list of some great shounen and seinen manga which are written or illustrated by women and are available in English.

Some great shounen and seinen manga by women mangaka:
Angelic Layer by CLAMP
Afterschool Charisma by Kumiko Suekane
Black Butler by Yana Toboso
Blue Exorcist by Kazue Kato
Blood+ by Asuka Katsura
Bloody Cross by Shiwo Komeyama
A Bride’s Story by Kaoru Mori
Code: Breaker by Akimine Kamijyo
Chobits by CLAMP
Chi’s Sweet Home by Kanata Konami
D. Gray-Man by Katsura Hishino
Deadman Wonderland written by Jinsei Kataoka, illustrated by Kazuma Kondou
Dorohedoro by Q Hayashida
Drug & Drop by CLAMP
Emma by Kaoru Mori
ES: Eternal Sabbath by Fuyumi Soryo
Flowers & Bees by Moyoco Anno
Fullmetal Alchemist by Hiromu Arakawa
Gangsta by Kohske
Hikaru no Go written by Yumi Hotta, illustrated by Takeshi Obata
House of Five Leaves by Natsume Ono
Inu x Boku SS by Cocoa Fujiwara
InuYasha by Rumiko Takahashi
Kekkaishi by Yellow Tanabe
Lament of the Lamb by Kei Toume
Magi by Shinobu Ohtaka
Maison Ikkoku by Rumiko Takahashi
Mermaid Saga by Rumiko Takahashi
Mushishi by Yuki Urushibara
Nabari no Ou by Yuhki Kamatami
Noragami: Stray God by Toka Adachi
Pandora Hearts by Jun Mochizuki
Ranma 1/2 by Rumiko Takahashi
Reborn! by Akira Amano
Saiyuki by Kazuya Minekura
Sakuran by Moyoco Anno
Tactics by Sakura Kinoshita and Kazuko Higashiyama
To Terra… by Keiko Takemiya
Tsubasa by CLAMP
What Did You Eat Yesterday? by Fumi Yoshinaga
Wolfsmund by Mitsuhisa Kuji
xxxHolic by CLAMP
Zombie-Loan by Peach-Pit

This list is by no means exhaustive! Phenomenal women mangaka have created tons of great manga, far to many for me to list here. Also, thank you to everyone who shared their favorite women mangaka creators with me! I hope to see you again for the next manga giveaway, too.

Filed Under: UNSHELVED Tagged With: fullmetal alchemist, Hiromu Arakawa, manga

Bookshelf Overload: April 2014

May 2, 2014 by Ash Brown

Well, I knew at the beginning of the month that April was going to be rough on my wallet, what with all of the preorders and such that I had in place. Fortunately, I also had a couple of gift cards to burn, which alleviated some of the pain, but the month still ended up being a little embarrassing when it came to the amount of manga and other delights that made their way into my place of residence. April had some great releases, though. The manga that I was most excited for was the third Vinland Saga omnibus by Makoto Yukimura. (Review to come very soon. That is, most likely tomorrow.) My copy of the first omnibus in Takashi Ikeda’s series Whispered Words from One Peace Books arrived earlier than expected, which means it will likely become the next entry in my Year of Yuri review project. Comics-wise, I was delighted to see the nice, hardcover release of Mike Richardson and Stan Sakai’s 47 Ronin. (Also of note, Lone Wolf & Cub‘s Kazuo Koike served as the series’ editorial consultant.) Battle Royale is seeing a resurgence in English, including the release of the The Battle Royale Slam Book (it’s great; expect a review of this one soon, too) and a completely new translation of Koushun Takami’s original novel. Oh, and the final Berserk: The Golden Age anime film was also released! I’m still not completely sold on the use of the 3D CG, but I do love me some Berserk.

Manga!
Alive by Hajime Taguchi
Attack on Titan, Volume 12 by Hajime Isayama
Bokurano: Ours, Volume 1 by Mohiro Kitoh
Bunny Drop, Volume 10 by Yumi Unita
Crimson Spell, Volume 3 by Ayano Yamane
Dorohedoro, Volume 12 by Q Hayashida
Dictatorial Grimoire, Volume 3: Red Riding Hood by Ayumi Kanou
Drifters, Volume 3 by Kohta Hirano
The Drifting Classroom, Volumes 4-7 by Kazuo Umezu
Fairy Tail, Volume 37 by Hiro Mashima
The Flowers of Evil, Volume 9 by Shuzo Oshimi
Knights of Sidonia, Volume 8 by Tsutomu Nihei
Library Wars: Love & War, Volume 11 by Kiiro Yumi
Lone Wolf and Cub, Omnibus 4 written by Kazuo Koike, illustrated by Goseki Kojima
Mail, Volumes 1-3 by Housui Yamazaki
Man of Many Faces, Volumes 1-2 by CLAMP
No. 6, Volume 6 by Hinoki Kino
No Matter How I Look at It, It’s You Guys’ Fault I’m Not Popular!, Volume 3 by Nico Tanigawa
Oishinbo, A la Carte: Vegetables written by Tetsu Kariya, illustrated by Akira Hanasaki
Say I Love You, Volume 1 by Kanae Hazuki
Sunny, Volume 3 by Taiyo Matsumoto
Tegami Bachi, Volumes 1-14 by Hiroyuki Asada
Vagabond, Omnibus 5 b Takehiko Inoue
Vinland Saga, Omnibus 3 by Makoto Yukimura
Whispered Words, Omnibus 1 by Takashi Ikeda
Wolfsmund, Volume 4 by Mitsuhisa Kuji
xxxHolic: Rei, Volume 1 by CLAMP
Yakitate!! Japan, Volumes 1-3 by Takashi Hashiguchi
You and Me, Etc. by Kyuugou

Manhwa!
9 Faces of Love by Wann
Stone Collector, Book 2 written by Kevin Han, illustrated by Zom-J

Comics!
47 Ronin written by Mike Richardson, illustrated by Stan Sakai
Greek Love written by Dale Lazarov, illustrated by Adam Graphite
Juku: A Comics Album by Various
Monsters & Titans: Battling Boy on Tour by Paul Pope
Sex Criminals, Volume 1 written by Matt Fraction, illustrated by Chip Zdarsky

Novels!
Battle Royale: Remastered by Koushun Takami

Collections!
Monkey Business, Volume 4 edited by Motoyuki Shibata and Ted Goossen

Nonfiction!
The Battle Royale Slam Book: Essays on the Cult Classic by Koushun Takami edited by Nick Mamatas and Masumi Washington
Strong in the Rain: Surviving Japan’s Earthquake, Tsunami, and Fukushima Nuclear Disaster by Lucy Birmingham and David McNeill

Anime!
Berserk: The Golden Age, Arc III: The Advent directed by Toshiyuki Kubooka

Filed Under: Bookshelf Overload, UNSHELVED

Sakuracon License Roundup

April 20, 2014 by Sean Gaffney

Well, we’ve had another con, and this time three big publishers were there to say things about manga: Viz, Yen, and Dark Horse. What did they say?

worldtrigger1

Not much from Viz, which usually saves its big announcements for the summer. They did indicate that one of their recent Weekly Jump digital series, World Trigger, would be getting a physical release this fall. With a plot that features high school students with superpowers taking on invaders from another dimension, it’s hard for me to think of it as anything but ‘Precure for guys’, but I will be interested to see what it’s like – Jump’s really been hitting its stride lately.

The big announcements were from Yen Press, and not just in the manga department. Let’s start with manga, though, as I have a feeling that most of the fandom will be focusing on one particular license, so I’ll save that for the end. King of Eden is by the author best known for collaborating with Naoki Urasawa on Billy Bat and others Takashi Nagasaki (aka Richard Woo). Well, Billy Bat is still unlicensed, but we do have King of Eden, a new horror series with art by SangCheol Lee, who I am totally unfamiliar with. This one looks to be worldwide digital, so my guess is it’s starting in Japan at the same time it does here.

Pandora Hearts is getting an artbook, Odds and Ends, which will be hardcover and have a slipcase, like many Japanese artbooks these days. Everything’s going upscale.

Gou-dere Sora Nagihara is the ecchi title of the con. It’s by Suu Minazuki, creator of Sora no Otoshimono. Our hero is an otaku in love with a fictional character. One day she comes to life before him, but her personality is not quite what he was expecting. She apparently decides to get her new master a harem, or at least help him get some action. This is from Hakusensha’s Young Animal Arashi, as if the description didn’t already tell you that (it was either that or Champion Red). We shall see.

14-sai

Also from Hakusensha, from their sort of unclassifiable magazine Rakuen Le Paradis (think of it along the lines of Manga Erotics F), we get 14-sai no Koi, which I have been reliably informed is ‘excruciatingly adorable’. It features two 14-year-olds who are very wise and mature for their years… but they’re still 14, and falling in love with each other is going to bring all the awkward that this entails. The author, Fuka Mizutani, is best known here for several yuri stories in various anthologies. This isn’t yuri, but I feel her fans will want to seek it out anyway. It certainly sounds great to me.

Lastly on the manga front, we have a new title by Aki, whose Olympos Yen had previously brought over here, and perhaps best known for Utahime. Elhanburg no Tenshi ran in Shodensha’s Haruca, one of their more obscure josei magazines. Two childhood friends take over a castle supposedly haunted by an angel, but things quickly turn south when a woman becomes involved. Given my experience with Olympos, my hope is to have a better handle on what’s going on with this plot.

And then there’s light novels. Yen has had more success with this genre than any other publisher, something that they did not hesitate to bring up at the con. They’re putting out an omnibus hardcover of the Another novel, which had been released digitally a year or so ago, and whose manga they also released. However, they’re also creating a new imprint just for light noels, Yen On! What will debut from it this fall?

It wouldn’t be a light novel imprint without an awkward, long title that ends in a question mark, so let’s introduce ourselves to Dungeon ni Deai o Motomeru no wa Machigatte Iru Darou ka?, aka DanMachi, which Yen is releasing over here as ‘Is It Wrong To Try To Pick Up Girls In A Dungeon?’. This seems to be another fantasy series along the lines of Zero’s Familiar, with a boy who wants to be an adventurer meeting a goddess who has trouble getting worshippers. I’ll bet you two to one it’s zany.

However, this was all a prelude to the big announcement.

IndexLN1

Yes, you’re not seeing things. To Aru Majutsu no Index, aka A Certain Magical Index. I’m not sure if Yen has licensed all 32+ novels right at the moment… my guess is about 6 with an option for more. But it’s certainly been one of the most requested titles of the last several years, and its spinoff series, A Certain Scientific Railgun, is selling quite well for Seven Seas. (As for the Index manga… trust me, read the books, it’s better.) I’m very interested to see how this sells. The lead male, Touma, is a divisive figure who acquires a harem yet makes no moves on any of them, and also has a story-breaker power he uses at least once per book. The heroine, Index… well, even that’s arguable, as Index may not actually be the series heroine so much as the series mascot. She also has a personality that Western fans have not exactly taken to their bosoms. That said, I really hope that everyone who demanded this series be licensed actually goes out and buys it, because this is a big investment, and kudos to Yen for going for it. Also, it has lots of cool things happening.

Lastly, we have Dark Horse, who added quite a bit of manga, to my surprise. Their continued re-release of CLAMP continues with the Legal Drug series coming out as an omnibus this fall. They’ve also licensed the sequel, Drug & Drop. Both series are published whenever CLAMP feels like it, so it should be easy to catch up with Japan. They’re also starting to digitize the bigger CLAMP titles, such as Card Captor Sakura and Chobits, later this spring.

There’s also the OreImo spinoff Ore no Kouhai ga Konna ni Kawaii Wake ga Nai (My Kouhai Can’t Be This Cute), which Dark Horse is sensibly retitling OreImo: Kuroneko. This ASCII Mediaworks series runs in Dengeki G’s, and is, as you might guess, focused on Kuroneko’s storyline in this series. Given the way the light novel series recently ended, I will be interested to see if its fandom is still around to get this, but hey, it’s cute and moe as heck.

opus

And we have not one, but TWO titles from Satoshi Kon, whose Tropic of the Sea was released by Vertical recently. Opus came out in the mid-90s right before the author directed Perfect Blue, and was never finished in Tankobon form, though Tokuma Shoten published the ending in in the volume collection, which we’ll be seeing here. There is also Seraphim: 266613336 Wings, which was written by Mamoru Oshii, a creator that I have a lot of issues with. It’s also a mid-90s manga, from Animage magazine, and may I just note that that is an awful lot of wings in the title. If I were an angel, I’d want to cut back to maybe 4, or even less.

So that’a a lot of new stuff. What appeals to you the most?

Filed Under: NEWS, UNSHELVED

Bookshelf Overload: March 2014

April 4, 2014 by Ash Brown

Compared to some past months, the number of my March acquisitions seems completely reasonable to me. I’ve looked ahead to what April has in store for me (and my wallet) and it’ll be a bit ridiculous, so I’m glad that March ended up being relatively light. Even so, there were some things I was very happy to see arrive last month. Gengoroh Tagame had a second gay manga published by Bruno Gmünder, Gunji. Two of my most anticipated releases for 2014 made their appearance in March, too: the first volume in Fumi Yoshinaga’s What Did You Eat Yesterday? from Vertical and Inio Asano’s Nijigahara Holograph from Fantagraphics. (Reviews to come soon!) I was also happy to see Bento Books newest release, Kaoru Ohno’s novel Cage on the Sea. Not too long ago I reviewed Jeffery Angle’s Writing the Love of Boys, which got me interested in the work of Taruho Inagaki. By some miracle, I actually managed to find a copy of his extremely out-of-print novel Miroku, which had a very small print run from a very small press which, as far as I can tell, doesn’t even exist anymore.

Manga!
Castle Mango, Volume 2 written Muku Ogura,illustrated by Narise Konohara
Embracing Love, Omnibus 2 by Youka Nitta
From the New World, Volumes 2-3 by written by Yusuke Kishi, illustrated by Toru Oikawa
Gunji by Gengoroh Tagame
Hide and Seek, Volume 2 by Yaya Sakuragi
The Incredible Kintaro by Naomi Guren
Japan, Inc.: An Introduction to Japanese Economics by Shotaro Ishinomori
Mobile Suit Gundam: The Origin, Volume 5: Char & Sayla by Yoshikazu Yasuhiko
Monster Musume, Volume 2 by Okayado
Nijigahara Holograph by Inio Asano
Train Train, Volumes 1-3 by Eiki Eiki
What Did You Eat Yesterday?, Volume 1 by Fumi Yoshinaga
Ze, Volume 8 by Yuki Shimizu

Manhwa!
Stone Collector, Book 1 written by Kevin Han, illustrated by Zom-J.

Comics!
Black is the Color by Julia Gfrörer
Brody’s Ghost, Book 5 by Mark Crilley
In These Words, Chapter 11 by Guilt | Pleasure
The Sleep of Reason: An Anthology of Horror edited by C. Spike Trotman
The Undertaking of Lily Chen by Danica Novgorodoff

Novels!
The Budding Tree by Aiko Kitahara
Cage on the Sea by Kaoru Ohno
God’s Boat by Kaori Ekuni
Miroku by Taruho Inagaki

Nonfiction!
Understanding Manga and Anime by Robin E. Brenner
One Thousand Years of Manga by Brigitte Koyama-Richard
Twelve Views from the Distance by Mutsuo Takahashi

Filed Under: Bookshelf Overload, UNSHELVED

Manga Giveaway: Battle Angel Alita Giveaway Winner

April 2, 2014 by Ash Brown

Battle Angel Alita: Last Order, Omnibus 1And the winner of the Battle Angel Alita Giveaway is…Anna-neko!

As the winner, Anna-neko will be receiving the first omnibus in Kodansha Comics’ release of Battle Angel Alita: Last Order by Yukito Kishiro. The omnibus collects the first three volumes of the series as well as additional stories by Kishiro. The titular Alita is a kick-ass cyborg, and I have a particular fondness for cyborgs, so I asked those entering the giveaway to tell me a little about their favorite cyborgs from manga. Check out the Battle Angel Alita Giveaway comments for all of the details, and check out the list of some of the manga available in English that feature cyborgs below!

Cyborg manga in English:
Appleseed by Masamune Shirow
Ashen Victor by Yukito Kishiro
Battle Angel Alita by Yukito Kishiro
Battle Angel Alita: Last Order by Yukito Kishiro
Blame! by Tsutomu Nihei
B’t X by Masami Kurumada
Cyborg 009 by Shotaro Ishinomori
Cowboy Bebop by Yutaka Nanten
Cowboy Bebop: Shooting Star by Cain Kuga
Descendents of Darkness by Yoko Matsushita
Eden: It’s an Endless World by Hiroki Endo
Ghost in the Shell by Masamune Shirow
Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex by Yu Kinutani
Gunslinger Girl by Yu Aida
Heavy Metal Warrior Xenon by Masaomi Kanzaki
Kamen Rider by Shotaro Ishinomori
Knights of Sidonia by Tsutomu Nihei
Madara written by Eiji Otsuka and illustrated by Shou Tajima
Made in Heaven written by Ami Sakurai and illustrated by Yukari Yashiki
Mardock Scramble by Yoshitoki Oima.
One-Punch Man written by ONE and illustrated by Yusuke Murata
Star Wars: Return of the Jedi by Sin-ichi Hiromoto
Trigun by Yasuhiro Nightow
Trinity Blood written by Sunao Yoshida and illustrated by Kiyo Kyujyō
Vassalord by Nanae Chrono
The World of Narue by Tomohiro Marukawa

Thank you to everyone who participated in the giveaway and shared a bit about their favorite cyborgs from manga. I hope to see you all again for the next giveaway, too!

Filed Under: UNSHELVED Tagged With: Battle Angel Alita, manga, Yukito Kishiro

First Look at Comic Walker

March 22, 2014 by Sean Gaffney

Last month, Kadokawa announced a new online comic portal, Comic Walker, that would debut this week. It has 116 titles in Japanese, of which 18 are also available in English. It also has an iPad and Android app, though I was only able to access the English titles on that, whereas on the website I can also see the Japanese titles. The content is downloaded to your device, similar to Viz’s app store, rather than in a Cloud setting, so you should be able to read it offline (though I didn’t test this.)

The site has a bit of fractured English when you sign up/log in and look at the Contact Info. The translations I checked, however, seem reasonably fine. So what have we got? We get the first chapters (mostly, some had 2 or 3) of 18 titles, 8 of have been released over here in North America in some print form or other – or will be soon. They are:

Mobile Suit Gundam: The Origin (Vertical)
Neon Genesis Evangelion (Viz)
High School D&D (Yen, in May 2014)
Haganai: I Don’t Have Many Friends (Seven Seas)
Kyo Kara Maoh! (Tokyopop)
Takasugi-san’s Obento (DMP)
Sgt. Frog (Tokyopop)
The Melancholy of Haruhi-chan Suzumiya (Yen)

As you’ll notice, some of these already have digital editions over here from their respective companies. I spot-checked some of the titles, and they seem to be using the same text/translation that we’ve seen before. Fans of the Tokyopop titles will be interested, as both of those are out of print here now.

So, what’s as yet unlicensed over here?

loghorizon

Anime fans will be familiar with Log Horizon, which is just finishing up and has already had a 2nd season announced. This is the manga version, which runs in Enterbrain’s Comic Clear. The ‘sucked into an RPG’ plotline may seem a bit over-familiar to folks, but I know it has fans.

There are two other Gundam titles from Kadokawa’s Gundam Ace. Mobile Suit Gundam The Origin: Special Edition seem to take place after a lot of the current origin comic, and I’ll warm you, there’s a spoiler that I was unaware of, though I imagine most Gundam fans knew it already. (It involves a romantic pairing.) It seems to be in the style of the original, and takes place in Japan (so far – remember, all these are just brief chapters.)

And for the wackier side of Gundam, there’s Gundam-san, the superdeformed 4-koma version, similar to Haruhi-chan. This is for Gundam fanatics only – I admit I didn’t get a lot of the otaku humor. But it looks funny, so I will pretend I get it. LOL!

Kagerou Days comes from Media Factory’s Comic Gene, a magazine I expect to see more titles from in the future. This intriguing title deals with a social shut-in who stays on his computer, who meets a cyber-girl named Ene. Can she convince him to go outside? This is apparently based on a series of songs by the artist Jin.

Tokyo ESP is a Shonen Ace title, and if Tokyopop was still around it would surely have licensed it by now. It features a girl who develops psychic powers after seeing a flying fish, and how she adapts to being telekinetic, especially as it transpires she’s not the only one to gain superpowers. This seems like something X-Men fans would enjoy.

archfiend

The second-best title in terms of verbiage goes to New Sister Archfiend Testament, aka Shinmai Maou no Keiyakusha. It is also a Shonen Ace title, and is based on a light novel. Indeed, the premise SCREAMS light novel. Average high school student ends up with two new sisters, who are a demon lord and a succubus, and he invariably ends up as the master of one of them. Ecchi shenanigans no doubt ensue.

Fate/Kaleid Liner Prisma Illya Drei! is the sequel to two other Fate/Kaleid titles, which are themselves part of the giant Fate/Stay Night multiverse. This runs in Comp Ace and is also, I suspect, quite ecchi. It’s a pseudo magical girl title.

Nobunaga the Fool is a brand new title running in Kadokawa’s Niconico A, and also had an anime coming out this past winter. I wonder if this fool is anything like The Irresponsible Captain Tylor? Probably not.

Non Non Biyori runs in Media Factory’s Comic Alive, a magazine that you never know when you’re going to get pure fanservice or something really worth your time. (Usually, it’s the former – its fellow magazine Comic Flapper has the same problem, but reversed.) It’s the slice of life seinen manga that you KNEW a rollout like this had to have, involving an elementary school girl who moves to the country from Tokyo, and has to adapt to rural life.

Lastly, and by far the longest title, goes to Archenemy And Hero – “Be Mine, Hero” “I Refuse!”, a Comp Ace title based around a franchise called Archenemy and Hero (Maoyuu Maou Yuusha). This seems to be an alternate telling of the basic premise, so hopefully won’t be too obscure for those who don’t know the series. Similar to Spice & Wolf, this seems to mesh together high fantasy and business economics.

That’s it for now. I briefly looked at some of the Japanese titles. A few I’d love to see. Bodacious Space Pirates has a manga there, as does Full Metal Panic!. There’s also Tonari no Seki-kun, which may show up after Vertical releases it here.

How will this do? No idea. Unlike JManga, it seems geared more to Japanese readers. That said, the titles they have are pretty good, and there’s some actual bestsellers, as opposed to the all new series approach of Manga Box. What do you think, plan to give it a try?

Filed Under: NEWS, UNSHELVED

Return of the Son of License Roundups

March 15, 2014 by Sean Gaffney

These are coming in so fast that I honestly can’t keep up, and I’m so glad that I’m not a news site.

biohazard

Viz had one more title I missed in the last roundup, which is Biohazard – Marhawa Desire, a Shonen Champion title that Viz will release under the Resident Evil name that North America uses. Given the tie-in, you can likely expect some horror here. It’s 5 volumes long.

celebration

The doujinshi anthology has done pretty well for companies in the past few years, as we’ve seen Dark Horse do one for Evangelion and Bandai do several related to Code Geass. Yen already had The Misadventures of Kyon and Koizumi. This one from Yen Press will actually be three from the same company fused together, and I suspect lots of comedy will ensue. It’s a good value for money, in any case.

alicediamonds

I’d seen this up on Amazon a while ago, but wanted to wait for confirmation as the info I could find suggested it was a light novel. But wait, I said. Seven Seas? Didn’t Adam Arnold say he’d rather gnaw his own leg off rather than publish another light novel? And yet there it is. This is what happens when you have access to a cash cow franchise. In any case, this novel is in the Alice in the Country of Diamonds series, whose premise I seem to recall is that Alice arrives in the new country but no one knows who she is. My guess, judging by the cover, is it’ll be another Blood pairing.

KoenoKatachi

As for Crunchyroll, they’ve announced so much I’ve gotten ridiculously far behind. 3 YKO titles, including the old JManga favorite And Yet The Town Moves. Some digital editions of manga already licensed for print, such as Heroic Legend of Arslan and Ajin. Lots of Moyoco Anno titles, including mature josei from Shodensha’s Feel Young and cute slice-of-life newspaper comic manga. A Morning manga that likely would not make it over to print anytime soon in Investor Z. And most exciting to me, Koe no Katachi, coming out as A Silent Voice, a Shonen Magazine title about a deaf student and the boy who bullies her then tries to atone for it years later. This may be the keeper of the group.

So, got any favorites in here?

Filed Under: NEWS, UNSHELVED

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