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Manga Bookshelf

Discussion, Resources, Roundtables, & Reviews

manga

Twin Spica, Vol. 1

April 26, 2010 by MJ 7 Comments

Twin Spica, Vol. 1
By Kou Yaginuma
Published by Vertical, Inc.
Rated 13+


Buy at RightStuf | Buy at Amazon

Fourteen years after a catastrophic space shuttle accident that was responsible for numerous civilian casualties, Japan’s space program is finally getting back on its feet, beginning with the establishment of Tokyo Space School’s Astronaut Training Course. There, fourteen-year-old Asumi competes with other prospective students, hoping to be accepted into the program and perhaps one day join Japan’s first successful manned excursion into space.

Though this series finished its run in seinen magazine Comic Flapper just last year, its simple artwork and wistful tone make its first volume read like an instant classic. Even the volume’s cover art, with its innocent imagery and sepia-like warmth, evokes feelings of nostalgia. Also, though the story’s foundation is set firmly in hard sci-fi, it is its heroine’s poignant and occasionally whimsical inner life that really defines its voice. Asumi provides the heart of this story, and it is a strange and wonderful heart indeed.

With her mother gone and her father often working, Asumi’s only confidante is a self-proclaimed ghost with a lion mask covering his head, whom she refers to as “Lion-san.” Even as Asumi begins her teen years, Lion-san remains a constant in her life, serving as a source of insight into a world she’s never truly felt a part of. He also provides a walking, talking symbol of the disaster that took her mother from her–a memory that she has safely locked away in the depths of her subconscious. That the volume opens with a spirited conversation between Asumi and her ghostly friend establishes the series’ supernatural/psychological focus from the start.

Asumi is both idiosyncratic and relatable. As a child, she is quiet and baffling to others–leaning into her mother’s corpse to find out how it smells and later stealing the ashes in order to give her mother a better view of the sea she so loved. As a teen, her concerns are more typical, focusing on dreams for her future and her ability to make friends, but the lonely little girl is still there, seeking comfort and advice from her supernatural friend.

All that said, Twin Spica is hardly a one-woman show. Supporting characters shine in this volume, from Asumi’s lonely teacher (whose first love was also killed fourteen years ago) to the girls with whom Asumi completes her astronaut exam. Even Asumi’s mother, seen mainly in a coma, bandaged from head to toe, is a compelling figure. One particularly complicated character is Asumi’s father. Though he obviously loves his daughter and supports her dreams, he is somewhat lost as a single parent and too often expresses himself through violence.

Yagimuna’s artwork is utterly charming. Simple, clean, and full of heartfelt emotion, it flows easily from panel to panel. Again here, there is a persistent air of nostalgia to the series, enhanced even by Vertical’s choice of font.

This volume feels short–just 124 pages of main story, followed by two short comics that provide a good chunk of backstory (written by Yagimuna before the series proper)–though that perception could just as easily be attributed to its overall delightfulness. Though the series was published as seinen in Japan, it provides substantial appeal for teen girls as well, especially those with their own dreams of space travel.

Hopeful, charming, and tinged with sadness, Twin Spica leaves us wanting more. Highly recommended.

Review copy provided by the publisher.

Filed Under: MANGA REVIEWS Tagged With: manga, twin spica

Mushishi Moveable Feast This Week!

April 25, 2010 by MJ 4 Comments

Manga Bookshelf has been on hiatus this week, thanks to an unexpected hospital stay for a key member of the household. We’ll be back on track starting tomorrow, but in the meantime, check out Ed Sizemore’s introductory post for this month’s Manga Moveable Feast, featuring one of my favorite series, Mushishi.

I have a lot to say about this series, and I admit I’ve already said quite a bit of it. I’ve reviewed two volumes of this series so far, volume six at Comics Should Be Good, and volume seven here at Manga Bookshelf. With my household’s recent turmoil, this may well be my entire contribution to the Feast, but be sure to keep an eye out for what I expect to be an exciting batch of discussion and reviews from around the manga blogosphere this week.

Enjoy!

Filed Under: NEWS Tagged With: manga, mushishi

Wild Ones, Vol. 9

April 18, 2010 by MJ Leave a Comment

By Kiyo Fujiwara
Viz, 200 pp.
Rating: Teen

Having finally agreed to speak to the father who abandoned him so many years ago, Rakuto is confronted with the possibility that he may eventually have to leave Sachie’s side in order to make peace with his own past. Meanwhile, Azuma is determined to let Sachie know how he feels, whether Rakuto is ready to play his part or not. Who does Sachie truly love? Has this ever been in question? If so, this volume provides an answer at long last!

Finally the series’ romantic tension is resolved, exactly as it was certain to be from the beginning. Some formulaic romances are enjoyable to read simply because they are so predictable. With these stories, the charm is in the writing, and watching their familiar scenarios play out is, frankly, comforting and downright delightful. Unfortunately, this is not one of those series. Though the couple in question are undeniably sweet, their relationship is so labored and so painfully drawn out, one finds oneself wishing something truly shocking would happen (a deadly plague? an alien invasion? ) just to break up the monotony. With its unbelievable premise and its terminally clueless lovers, this series seems determined to remain lifeless until the end.

Well, almost, anyway. To be fair, this volume’s final pages are honestly sweet, and may even evoke tears from desperate readers grateful for a bit of romantic satisfaction. It may not be an alien invasion, but long-time readers are at least assured some payoff.

Review copy provided by the publisher. Review originally published at PopCultureShock.

Filed Under: MANGA REVIEWS Tagged With: manga, wild ones

Bakuman finally makes US debut!

April 16, 2010 by MJ Leave a Comment

Everybody knows what a big Takeshi Obata fangirl I am (or at least they should), and it’s no secret that I’ve been anxious for the US debut of Bakuman, his latest collaboration with Tsugumi Ohba, author of Death Note.

Finally that day has come! Not the first volume (we’ve got a ways to go for that), but in the May issue of Shonen Jump, available now at an otaku-friendly newsstand near you. Check out the press release from Viz:

San Francisco, CA, April 14, 2010 – VIZ Media, LLC (VIZ Media), one of the entertainment industry’s most innovative and comprehensive publishing, animation and licensing companies, has announced the upcoming release of the manga series BAKUMAN。. The series, rated ‘T’ for Teens, will be released on August 3rd under VIZ Media’s popular Shonen Jump imprint and will carry a MSRP of $9.99 U.S. / $12.99 CAN. …

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Filed Under: NEWS Tagged With: bakuman, manga, press releases

Viz Releases Kingyo Used Books

April 16, 2010 by MJ Leave a Comment

Press Release: VIZ MEDIA TRANSPORTS READERS TO
KINGYO USED BOOKS – A FANTASTIC PLACE WHERE READERS FIND THEIR DREAMS IN MANGA

A Charming Bookshop with a Special Inventory Becomes a Place Where Lives Are Changed Through Manga

San Francisco, CA, April 15, 2010 – VIZ Media, LLC (VIZ Media), one of the entertainment industry’s most innovative and comprehensive publishing, animation and licensing companies, transports readers to an unassuming store that stocks all the manga a fan could ever desire with the release of KINGYO USED BOOKS on April 20th. The new series, by Seimu Yoshizaki, will be published under the VIZ Signature imprint, is rated ‘T+’ for Older Teens, and will carry an MSRP of $12.99 U.S. / $16.99 CAN.

In KINGYO USED BOOKS, a businessman discovers how his childhood memories …

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Filed Under: NEWS Tagged With: manga, press releases

Libre Books Available on Kindle

April 13, 2010 by MJ 1 Comment

Here’s an interesting press release that made it into my inbox today, from Japanese BL publisher Libre (via Animate U.S.A.), who are releasing English versions of several of their titles for the Kindle. See the full press release below:

…

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Filed Under: REVIEWS Tagged With: kindle, manga, yaoi/boys' love

Con Report: Anime Boston 2010

April 11, 2010 by MJ 4 Comments

Last weekend I attended Anime Boston–just Saturday (for the first time ever), which turned out to be the perfect way to go. AB is notoriously thin on manga content, and attending just for one day allowed me to take in most of what was there without becoming frustrated by what was not.

My day began in the best way possible: lunch with my favorite con buddies, Brigid Alverson and Robin Brenner, after which we headed over to see Roland Kelts talk about “Anime, Manga, and More,” in a panel sponsored by the Japanese consulate.

Despite its generic title, Kelts gave a riveting lecture on what makes Japanese comics unique, including a discussion on “superflat” technique (simple enough even for artistically impaired types like me to understand) and a philosophical look at the mouthless persona of Hello Kitty (“she should feel like you do”). …

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Filed Under: NEWS Tagged With: anime boston, convention reports, manga

Hello Anime Boston!

April 2, 2010 by MJ 2 Comments

It feels a bit ridiculous to make a post explaining an upcoming absence when I’ve already been absent most of the week, but that’s what I’m here to do!

It’s been a crazy few days behind the scenes at Manga Bookshelf, and tomorrow morning I head off to Anime Boston!

Saturday’s programming includes an industry panel from Vertical, the only manga publisher to present one this year (which makes one more than last year), and an evening “Manga Mania” panel featuring some of my favorite manga bloggers (like Brigid Alverson & Erin Finnegan), moderated by Ed Chavez.

I’ll be at the con all day Saturday (and possibly some of Sunday), so please track me down to say hello!

Filed Under: NEWS Tagged With: anime boston, conventions, manga

Guest Review: Itazura na Kiss, Vol. 1

March 28, 2010 by Nancy Thistlethwaite 1 Comment

Itazura na Kiss, Vol. 1
By Kaoru Tada
Published by DMP


Buy This Book

High school student Kotoko Aihara has admired Naoki Irie from afar after hearing him make an exceptional high school entrance speech two years ago. Her dream has been to get out of Class F (the class for underperformers) and into Class A—the same class as the school genius Naoki. However, as academics aren’t Kotoko’s strong point, she instead writes him a letter to tell him how she feels. Naoki flat-out rejects her letter offering in front of the entire school, saying he doesn’t like stupid women. Later that night after a mild earthquake destroys her new home, she and her father end up moving into the Irie household.

Itazura na Kiss is a romantic comedy that deals with the uncertainties of life in an amusing, reassuring way. Kotoko constantly finds herself out of her element and out of her depth. She is living in another family’s house and neither Naoki nor his little brother Yuuki wants her there. She hopes to attend college, but her entire class is failing the high school exams. And because she’s in Class F, Kotoko and her classmates are considered inferior and ridiculed by the rest of the school. To top it off, she has unwittingly attracted the attentions of a well-meaning but overly emotional yanki-type, Kin-chan, whose passionate, public declarations make her life at school even more embarrassing. Yet even through this, she now has a mother figure in her life (Naoki’s mom) who loves having a girl in the house and who does everything she can to make Kotoko feel welcome, including bringing Kotoko and Naoki together at every opportunity. Kotoko has great friends, including Kin-chan, who are there to help and watch out for her. Even Naoki, however unwillingly at the onset of trouble, is there to lend a hand when it matters. Her uncertainty about her future doesn’t go away, but she has two loving families living together in the same house to support her as she finds her own path.

Kotoko is a dreamer with a big heart. It’s these qualities that allow her to press on when others would simply give up. And most girls would with Naoki. He’s conceited, apathetic, and takes special pleasure in making Kotoko feel uncomfortable. But living in the Irie household gives Kotoko a chance to get to know a side to Naoki that he doesn’t show to others, and he is smart enough to realize that her involvement in his life is making him grow as a person. Rather than Naoki, who may be on his way to becoming a more compassionate person, Kotoko’s growth centers on surpassing obstacles that are deemed impossible by other more practical characters.

As well as creating engaging characters, Kaoru Tada had a gift for facial expressions. Readers can quickly grasp the emotional and comedic aspects in any given scene. Her artwork is full of gags, but this enables those rare quiet moments to have a special impact. This series was created in the early nineties, and it has smaller panels and fewer screentones than you would find in many current shoujo manga series. This isn’t a detriment to the work; it’s simply different. It also should be noted that the series wasn’t complete at the time Kaoru Tada passed away. However, this series is about the characters’ journey through life, not their destination, so it remains a fulfilling read even though the series never reaches the mangaka’s planned ending.

Itazura na Kiss has long been a favorite of mine, and I’m glad to see it released in the US. Few shoujo manga series allow the reader to follow the characters out of high school and stay with them as they go through subsequent stages of life. Amid the hardships and uncertainty the characters face, there is joy in these pages. Highly recommended.

Review copy provided by the publisher.

Filed Under: MANGA REVIEWS Tagged With: itazura na kiss, manga, nancy thistlethwaite

Hurray for Harlequin!

March 27, 2010 by MJ 4 Comments

Earlier this week at PopCultureShock, the ladies of the Manga Recon team (along with guest reviewer Danielle Leigh) took on several of DMP’s new Harlequin manga in a two-part column, “Hurray for Harlequin!”

First, a confession: I never got into Harlequin romances. For some reason they just never clicked with me. I would even go so far as to say that I actively disliked them the few times I tried to pick them up. As a teen, I was more interested in supernatural or fantasy-tinged romance from the likes of Mary Stewart or Andre Norton, or those generic teen romances with titles I can’t remember and cheesy plot lines I will never forget. No, really.

There was one, for instance, about a high school girl who gets roped into tutoring this guy who nobody likes because (though he is totally dreamy) he’s a terrible student and rude to everyone. As it turns out, he’s actually legally deaf and has been hiding it from everybody, including his dad who thinks he has a problem with earwax buildup. Our heroine, of course, figures it out, helps him cope, and winds up with a totally dreamy boyfriend as a reward.

But I digress.

Though I never got into Harlequin, I’ve read my share of formula romance, so when I was asked to review a couple of these stories I was determined to keep an open mind. Even so, I was skeptical about prose romance adapted to manga, especially as single volumes which would inevitably have to be abridged.

To an extent, my hesitation was warranted, but even a crusty old Harlequin-hater like me found plenty to enjoy.

The two manga I reviewed were Honor’s Promise (Original text by Sharon Sala, Art by Esu Chihara) and the surprisingly charming Only By Chance (Original text by Betty Neels, Art by Chieko Hara). Check out my reviews to see what I thought!

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: manga

Female Manga Bloggers From A-Z

March 26, 2010 by MJ 39 Comments

So, a friend mentioned on Twitter today that she’d been engaged in discussion with another friend on the topic of the manga blogosphere, revolving around the fact that it is a “very white male space … that seems to profoundly effect the way things are talked about.”

I was floored. All I could think was, what manga blogosphere is she talking about, because the one I’m looking at is really not that–at least not the “male” part. While I’d agree that both western comics blogging and anime blogging are male-dominated from what I’ve seen, my experience with manga blogging has been very much the opposite. Sure, there are a slew of great male manga bloggers out there (and many, many male fans) but when I look at my blogroll or RSS aggregator, women outnumber them by far. …

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Filed Under: FEATURES Tagged With: manga, women in manga

Comics about women, by women

March 24, 2010 by MJ Leave a Comment

Just a quick link to today’s recommended book list from Flashlight Worthy Books, Graphic Novels: About Women. By Women. The list is just one of several from FWB celebrating Women’s History Month, standing alongside categories like historical fiction, crime fiction, and young adult fiction.

Since graphic novels are such a broad medium, recommendations range from Alison Bechdel (The Essential Dykes to Watch Out For) to Fumiyo Kouno (Town of Evening Calm, Country of Cherry Blossoms) and everything in-between, including two titles from Fumi Yoshinaga. It shouldn’t be too surprising to hear that one of those, All My Darling Daughters, was recommended by me.

Quite a few manga made the list (including another of my personal favorites, Ai Yazawa’s NANA), but as FSW’s Peter Steinberg points out, the list is much less dominated by manga than one might expect. …

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Filed Under: NEWS Tagged With: comics, manga

Breaking Down Banana Fish, Vols. 1-2

March 20, 2010 by MJ, Katherine Dacey, Michelle Smith, Robin Brenner, Eva Volin, Khursten Santos and Connie C. 111 Comments

Any regular reader of this blog will know that one of my favorite manga series is Akimi Yoshida’s 1980s shojo epic, Banana Fish.

I’ve spent quite a bit of effort attempting to persuade readers to check it out, so just imagine my joy when a few of my favorite manga bloggers agreed to indulge me in an ongoing roundtable discussion of the series!

Joining me here are Michelle Smith (Soliloquy in Blue), Khursten Santos (Otaku Champloo), Connie (Slightly Biased Manga), Eva Volin (Good Comics For Kids), Robin Brenner (No Flying, No Tights), and Katherine Dacey (The Manga Critic). Each of these women writes about manga for multiple blogs and other online publications (despite the fact I’ve listed only one each here) and their combined knowledge and experience is, frankly, pretty intimidating if you let yourself ponder it for too long. …

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Filed Under: FEATURES Tagged With: banana fish, breaking down banana fish, manga, roundtables

Natsume’s Book of Friends, Vol. 2

March 19, 2010 by MJ 2 Comments

By Yuki Midorikawa
Viz, 208 pp.
Rating: Teen

In this volume, Natsume is coerced into attending a school-sponsored “haunted challenge,” only to discover that one of his classmates (who suspects his abilities) wants his help to communicate with a yokai . Next, he falls prey to a curse that he can’t break without supernatural assistance. Later, he meets another human with his abilities and also becomes possessed by a yokai with a final, desperate wish.

Though this volume focuses less on Natsume’s quest to return all the names in the “Book of Friends,” that’s actually not a bad thing at all. Each of the chapters in this installment of the series is more touching than the last, which is saying a lot considering that the first chapter begins with Natsume pouring water on a dehydrated yokai collapsed in the middle of the road.

Unlike his grandmother, Reiko, Natsume is slowly developing bonds with his fellow humans, but he’s also forging relationships with yokai that are much more genuine than Reiko ever bothered with. While she ruled over yokai with the power of the Book, Natsume reaches out to them with genuine affection, struggling to understand how the yokai‘s wants and priorities might differ from his own. This deceptively simple lesson in learning to value things outside one’s own experience is subtly and effectively presented, with the same gentleness that has characterized the series thus far. The series’ humor is a highlight in this volume as well, providing much-needed contrast to its forthright sentimentality.

Though the series’ structure is still rigidly episodic, Natsume’s character development is satisfying enough to easily keep up the story’s momentum. Natsume’s Book of Friends remains one of this year’s best shojo surprises!

Review copy provided by the publisher. Review originally published at PopCultureShock.

Filed Under: MANGA REVIEWS Tagged With: manga, natsume's book of friends

Dear Fandom: Please Grow Up.

March 17, 2010 by MJ 99 Comments

Yesterday saw the release of the first Twilight graphic novel adaptation, produced in all its glossy, hardcover glory by Yen Press. I haven’t had a chance to do more than a quick flip-through so far, but though I’ve never read the novels (and have little interest in doing so) I’m actually looking forward to taking a look at the series in graphic novel form, if only to see what all the hype is about.

By “hype” I’m not only talking about the series’ huge sales. I’m also interested in finding a connection with its notoriously rabid fans. I’ve found myself defending them quite a bit recently against accusations of being “crazy,” “repugnant,” and “freaks,” which has made me more curious about the source of their obsession than I might have been otherwise. After all, if obsessive fandom is the issue, there’s very little I can relate to more. …

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Filed Under: FEATURES Tagged With: fandom, manga, rants

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