Kodansha’s big reveal

The big news of the week happened yesterday, when Kodansha USA announced its summer lineup. Del Rey fans can rest assured that a number of titles will continue serialization under the new regime, including Air Gear, Fairy Tail, Negima, Sayonara, Zetsubou-Sensei, and The Wallflower. (Complete list is at the link.) Kodansha is also reviving a couple of older series, the wordless dinosaur tale Gon (last published by CMX) and Until the Full Moon (once licensed by Broccoli), by Fake creator Sanami Matoh.

New titles include

  • Monster Hunter Orage, by Fairy Tail manga-ka Hiro Mashima
  • Deltora Quest
  • The Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex
  • The sci-fi mangaMardock Scramble
  • Animal Land by Zatch Bell creator Makoto Raiku
  • Bloody Monday, a thriller
  • Cage of Eden: “Battle Royale meets Lost by way of Negima!”
  • A new Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney manga series

According to Scott VonSchilling, who live-tweeted the event, Del Rey will continue to publish Tsubasa and xxxHolic under its own imprint, and other books that weren’t mentioned aren’t necessarily canceled—just not scheduled yet.

Responses from the commentariat: Lissa Pattillo has a good summary and commentary at Kuriousity, and Daniella Orihuela-Gruber dubs Kodansha “more than a deadbeat publisher,” although she cautions them that more is needed—more announcements, a big license, and fix up that website already. Sean Gaffney has observations on a number of the books and notes that the lineup “looks a lot like Del Rey with the name crossed out,” which is probably a wise choice. Johanna Draper Carlson counts the releases per month and notes a few Del Rey titles that are not on the list. Kate Dacey also weighs in and notes the need for a new website.

There was some other manga news this week, and Lori Henderson sums it up in her weekly news digest at Manga Xanadu. Erica Friedman brings us another edition of Yuri Network News at Okazu.

Sean Gaffney and David Welsh check out this week’s new manga.

At The Comics Journal, Roland Kelts talks to Peepo Choo creator Felipe Smith about manga and comics.

Linda Thai continues her interview with Tokyopop CEO Stu Levy at Something Deeper.

Kate Dacey asked readers of The Manga Critic to name their favorite food manga, and she comes up with a solid list of recommendations.

Ed Sizemore wraps up the Manga Moveable Feast with a podcast in which he, David Welsh, Sean Gaffney, and Erica Friedman discuss the main dish, One Piece.

You Higashino’s yaoi manga Hyper Loving a Maniac is being released on the Kindle in the U.S. at about the same time it is being published in print and digital form in Japan.

News from Japan: Details of the latest Yu-Gi-Oh! manga and anime, Yu-Gi-Oh! Zexa, will be revealed in the February issue of V Jump magazine, due out on Saturday.

Reviews

Charles Webb on vol. 1 of 7 Billion Needles (Manga Life)
Connie on vol. 5 of Breath (Slightly Biased Manga)
Johanna Draper Carlson on vol. 5 of Butterflies, Flowers (Comics Worth Reading)
Leroy Douresseaux on vol. 7 of Detroit Metal City (The Comic Book Bin)
Lissa Pattillo on Gaba Kawa! (Kuriousity)
Zack Davisson on Japan as Viewed by 17 Creators (Japan Reviewed)
Kate Dacey on Not Love But Delicious Foods Make Me So Happy! (The Manga Critic)
Connie on vol. 10 of Pet Shop of Horrors (Slightly Biased Manga)
Diana Dang on vol. 1 of The Story of Saiunkoku (Stop, Drop, and Read!)
Kristin on Sugar Milk and The Day I Became a Butterfly (Comic Attack)

Quickies

Daniella Orihuela-Gruber has some advice for manga publishers about going digital.

Jason Thompson takes a look at Battle Angel Alita in his latest House of 1000 Manga column at ANN.

Linda Thai’s interview with Stu Levy continues at Something Deeper.

Melinda Beasi recommends some manga folks to follow on Twitter and looks at some cold-weather manga, as winter closes in.

David Welsh finishes off the Manga Moveable Feast with a few final posts.

The Yaoi Review has the latest Animate yaoi releases for the Kindle.

News from Japan: Ten publishers, including manga giants Kodansha, Shueisha, and Shogakukan, have announced they will boycotting the Tokyo Anime Fair to protest the Tokyo government’s amendment to the Youth Healthy Development Ordinance, which would require the manga industry to restrict the sale of various materials to minors. Love Hina creator Ken Akamatsu has announced that he will release some of his rare early works online, for free, in PDF form.

Reviews

Brent Newhall on vol. 1 of Hikaru no Go (Otaku, No Video)
Anna on vol. 1 of Kamisama Kiss (Manga Report)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 3 of Seiho Boys High School (A Case Suitable for Treatment)
Ai Kano on vol. 14 of Strawberry 100% (Animanga Nation)
Todd Douglass on vol. 9 of Yotsuba&! (Anime Maki)

Recent and future reading

Hikaru Sasahara of Digital Manga Publishing gives PWCW’s Kai-Ming Cha all the dope on the Digital Manga Guild, which will allow fans and amateurs to translate manga legitimately and pay a cut of the sales on the back end. Among other things, he names three of the publishers involved, all of whom, I believe, have done business with Digital in the past.

Michelle Smith and Melinda Beasi discuss some recent manga and the last days of Del Rey in their latest Off the Shelf column at Manga Bookshelf.

At the Manga Curmudgeon, David Welsh picks the most interesting manga out of the December Previews, and he also reaches the letter S in his seinen alphabet.

Lori Henderson presents her 2010 Manga Gift Guide at Manga Xanadu.

Reviews: Ash Brown has more short takes on recent reading, this time from the library, at Experiments in Manga.

Lori Henderson on vols. 1 and 2 of Alice the 101st (Comics Village)
Kate Dacey on vols. 1 and 2 of Bunny Drop (The Manga Critic)
Julie Opipari on vol. 4 of Children of the Sea (Manga Maniac Cafe)
Deb Aoki on vol. 1 of Genkaku Picasso (About.com)
Kristin on vol. 1 of Genkaku Picasso (Comic Attack)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 1 of Kamisama Kiss (A Case Suitable for Treatment)
Lori Henderson on the December issue of Shonen Jump (Manga Xanadu)
Penny Kenny on vol. 10 of Vampire Knight (Manga Life)

Midweek update

Kate Dacey posts her picks for the best manga of 2010 at The Manga Critic.

David Welsh looks at this week’s new manga at The Manga Curmudgeon.

Melinda Beasi looks at the month to come in her latest Manhwa Monday post, and she also recommends her pick of the week.

Esosa Osamwonyi looks back at a decade of shounen manga and anime at iSugoi.

Linda Thai continues her interview with Tokyopop CEO Stu Levy at Something Deeper.

David Welsh winds up the December Manga Movable Feast at Precocious Curmudgeon. The next Manga Movable Feast will be hosted by Manga Report in January, and the main dish will be Karakuri Odette.

Daniella Orihuela-Gruber is looking for guest bloggers to help out at All About Manga while she is out of town.

News from Japan: ANN reports that Vagabond is still on hiatus; creator Takehiko Inoue initially took time off because of his health, which seems to be fine, but he just isn’t that into it any more. Tokuma Shoten will publish two manga by the late anime director Satoshi Kon.

Reviews: Carlo Santos critiques Ayako, K-ON!, and everything in between in his latest Right Turn Only!! column at ANN. Ash Brown looks over a week’s worth of manga reading at Experiments in Manga. And Soul Eater Not!, a new Soul Eater series, will start running in Shonen Gangan magazine in January.

Kristin on Ayako (Comic Attack)
Karen Maeda on vols. 1-3 of Black Gate (omnibus edition) (Sequential Tart)
Lissa Pattillo on vol. 11 of Black God (Kuriousity)
Erica Friedman on vol. 2 of Comic Lily Plus (Okazu)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 13 of Gakuen Alice (A Case Suitable for Treatment)
Julie Opipari on vols. 4/5 of Goong (omnibus edition) (Manga Manaic Cafe)
Erica Friedman on Hoshikawa Ginza Yon-choume (Okazu)
Julie Opipari on vol. 4 of Jack Frost (Manga Maniac Cafe)
Andre on vol. 16 of Inubaka – Crazy for Dogs (Kuriousity)
Todd Douglass on vol. 1 of Kurozakuro (Anime Maki)
Zack Davisson on vol. 4 of Ooku: The Inner Chamber (Manga Life)
Leroy Douresseaux on vol. 6/7 of Psycho Busters (omnibus edition) (I Reads You)
Nick Smith on vol. 1 of Sasameke (ICv2)
Kate O’Neil on vol. 8 of Sayonara, Zetsubou-Sensei (Mania.com)
Grant Goodman on vol. 4 of Soul Eater (Comics Village)
Theron Martin on vol. 3 of Spice & Wolf (ANN)
Dave Ferraro on vol. 1 of The Story of Saiunkoku (Comics-and-More)
AstroNerdBoy on vol. 16 of xxxHolic (AstroNerdBoy’s Anime & Manga Blog)

DramaQueen lives, MMF winds down

Lori Henderson posts the week’s manga news at Manga Xanadu, and Erica Friedman has all the latest yuri news at Okazu.

Sean Gaffney takes an advance look at this week’s new manga at A Case Suitable for Treatment, and Lori Henderson lists the past week’s all-ages comics and manga at Good Comics for Kids.

Meanwhile, Lissa Pattillo spots signs of life at DramaQueen, as they begin taking pre-orders for Missing Road.

Jennifer LeBlanc continues her interview with Hinako Takanaga at The Yaoi Review.

Daniella Orihuela-Gruber rounds up the Manga Gift Guides published by various bloggers this week.

It’s time for the last course in this week’s Manga Moveable Feast, and host David Welsh rounds up all the links from days six and seven at The Manga Curmudgeon. David also files a license request for an earlier book by One Piece creator Eiichiro Oda, Wanted!

Ed Sizemore and Melinda Beasi discuss Sundome in the latest Manga Out Loud This inspired Khursten of Otaku Champloo to read the book herself and add her own commentary.

Here’s a blog that I just found, although it has been around for a while: Something Deeper: Anime, Manga and Comics, written by a librarian. Check out the six-part interview with Tokyopop CEO Stu Levy, starting here.

Need a stocking stuffer? Kate Dacey is giving away a copy of Fumi Yoshinaga’s Not Love but Delicious Foods Make Me So Happy! at The Manga Critic, and Anna is giving away the first volume of The Story of Saiunkoku at Manga Report.

News from Japan: The big news this week is that the publishers Kodansha and Shueisha have signed on with Ken Akamatsu’s online manga site J-Comi. The second beta will go live sometime this month with several older titles provided by the publishers, and the final version of the site will launch in January. In other news, Media Factory will launch a new manga magazine, Comic Gene, in April 2011.

Reviews: Melanie posts some short manga reviews at About Heroes.

Rob McMonigal on vol. 1 of 20th Century Boys (Panel Patter)
Connie on vol. 4 of Alice in the Country of Hearts (Slightly Biased Manga)
Joy Kim on vol. 1 of Arisa (Joy Kim)
Sean Kleefeld on vol. 2 of Bakuman (Kleefeld on Comics)
Leroy Douresseaux on vol. 33 of Bleach (The Comic Book Bin)
Julie Opipari on vol. 2 of Cirque du Freak (Manga Maniac Cafe)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 8 of Gatcha Gacha (A Case Suitable for Treatment)
Erica Friedman on Hana no Asuka-gumi (The Hooded Utilitarian)
Leroy Douresseaux on vol. 1 of I Am Here (The Comic Book Bin)
Bill Sherman on vol. 2 of Itazura na Kiss (Blogcritics)
Connie on vol. 1 of Itsuwaribito (Slightly Biased Manga)
Lissa Pattillo on vol. 10 of Legend (Kuriousity)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 8 of Sayonara Zetsubou-Sensei (A Case Suitable for Treatment)
Lissa Pattillo on Strawberry Panic (omnibus edition) (ANN)
Greg McElhatton on vol. 1 of Summit of the Gods (Read About Comics)
Kristin on vol. 3 of Ultimo (Comic Attack)
Julie Opipari on vol. 1 of Wolf God (Mania.com)

Dogs and pirates

I’m back! Many thanks to Melinda Beasi and Kate Dacey for being such good stewards of the blog during my hiatus—I began to feel quite redundant! They seem to have covered the manga scene pretty comprehensively, so here’s what has popped up since then:

Jason Thompson looks at the vintage dog-battle manga Ginga Legend Weed in his latest House of 1000 Manga column at ANN.

Kristin takes a manga-centric look at the December Previews at Comic Attack.

The Manga Moveable Feast rolls onward as Ed Sizemore writes about what makes One Piece so appealing at Comics Worth Reading and Kate Dacey lists three reasons to read One Piece at The Manga Critic. Alex Hoffman discusses what he has learned from the series at Manga Widget, David Welsh compares the Straw Hats to the Avengers, and Anna looks at some other stretchy comics characters at Manga Report. David Brothers takes a look at the Baroque Works arc at 4thletter, and David rounds up the latest posts at The Manga Curmudgeon.

Melinda Beasi names her three favorite manga heroines of the past year—and none are from shoujo manga. She also has a brief discusson of the fanservice in Sundome.

Daniella Orihuela-Gruber, who is a freelance manga editor, makes a mistake and learns the world won’t come to an end, although it was a lot of work fixing it.

News from Japan: Shueisha is replacing its seinen magazine Monthly Young Jump with a bimonthly magazine titled Miracle Jump.

Reviews: Erica Friedman’s review of Moto Hagio’s A Drunken Dream and Other Stories begins by putting the stories in context, an important first step for anyone who wants to critique Hagio’s work.

Sarah Boslaugh on vol. 1 of Arisa (Playback:stl)
Alex Hoffman on Ayako (Manga Widget)
Lissa Pattillo on vol. 33 of Bleach (Kuriousity)
Leroy Douresseaux on vol. 36 of Case Closed (The Comic Book Bin)
Ken Haley on vol. 4 of Itazura na Kiss (Sequential Ink)
Erica Friedman on vol. 5 of Jormungand (Okazu)
Angela Eastman on vol. 1 of Kamisama Kiss (Suite101.com)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 2 of My Girlfriend’s a Geek (A Case Suitable for Treatment)
Eduardo Zacarias on vol. 49 of Naruto (Animanga Nation)
Katherine Farmar on No Touching At All (Comics Village)
Justin Colussy-Estes on vol. 2 of Toriko (Comics Village)