Bandai cancels new anime and manga releases

Today’s big story is the loss of another manga publisher: Bandai Entertainment, which is chiefly known for its anime but also put out a small but solid line of manga, will stop releasing new material as of February. Check ANN later today for an interview with Bandai president Ken Iyadomi; in the meantime, they have already posted the list of manga that have been cancelled:

Code Geass: Renya (Code Geass: Shikkoku no Renya)
Gurren Lagann volume 7
Kannagi volumes 4-6
Lucky Star Boo Boo Kagaboo (spinoff by Eretto)
Mobile Suit Gundam 00I
Tales of the Abyss: Jade’s Secret Memories volumes 1 and 2

Manga was clearly a sideline for Bandai—most of their titles were tie-ins to their anime—but aside from the early translations of Lucky Star, they did a nice job with it and their marketing director, Robert Napton, made it a point to reach out to the manga community and make their manga accessible to us. Obviously this will have a bigger impact on anime fans than manga readers, but Bandai put out some nice books—I’m particularly fond of their version of The Girl Who Leapt Through Time—and they will be missed.

At MTV Geek, I took a look back at the big manga events of 2011. Lissa Pattillo has a year in review post at Kuriousity as well.

The Manga Bookshelf bloggers discuss their Pick of the Week—I haven’t joined this discussion yet, but hopefully I’ll be there next week.

Deb Aoki updates her list of the 10 must-read shoujo manga to reflect the latest releases.

Jason Yadao checks in at the end of the Sailor Moon Manga Moveable Feast with a post on how his view of Sailor Moon has evolved over the years.

Three Steps Over Japan takes a look at a Shigeru Mizuki manga that hasn’t been licensed over here yet, GeGeGe no Kakeibo.

Alex Hoffman starts the new year with a new URL for Manga Widget.

Tech talk: CNET’s Eric Mack picks up on the manga Sweet Android High School, in which different brands of smartphones are anthropomorphized as Japanese schoolgirls. Oddly, there’s no iPhone version yet, but check out this Steve Jobs tribute doujinshi that portrays the late co-CEO of Apple as a woman.

News from Japan: Manga-ka Hisao Maki, who wrote WARU and worked on a number of anime adaptations, has died. Ran Igarashi (Hōzuki-san Chi no Aneki) will launch a new coming-of-age manga in Young Ace magazine. Kodansha’s Young Magazine has six new series lined up to launch in the next few weeks, including yet another GTO spinoff.

Reviews: Carlo Santos takes an unsparing look at a stack of new manga in his latest Right Turn Only!! column at ANN. Ash Brown posts the first weekly manga roundup of the new year at Experiments in Manga. The Manga Bookshelf team files this week’s set of Bookshelf Briefs.

Justin on vols. 1 and 2 of A Bride’s Story (Organization Anti-Social Geniuses)
Rob McMonigal on vols. 1 and 2 of A Bride’s Story (Panel Patter)
Connie on vol. 10 of Cipher (Slightly Biased Manga)
Rebecca Silverman on D.Gray-Man Illustrations Artbook (ANN)
Connie on vol. 1 of Fluffy Fluffy Cinnamoroll (Slightly Biased Manga)
Joanna Draper Carlson on vol. 1 of Fluffy Fluffy Cinnamoroll (Comics Worth Reading)
Connie on vol. 25 of Fullmetal Alchemist (Slightly Biased Manga)
Connie on Haru Hana (Slightly Biased Manga)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 16 of Higurashi: When They Cry (A Case Suitable for Treatment)
Rebecca Silverman on vol. 6 of Kamisama Kiss (ANN)
Connie on vol. 3 of Kingyo Used Books (Slightly Biased Manga)
Lori Henderson on vols. 5 and 6 of Pandora Hearts (Manga Village)
Connie on vol. 16 of Reborn (Slightly Biased Manga)
Connie on vol. 12 of We Were There (Slightly Biased Manga)

Highlights, roundups, and a trip back through time

Lissa Pattillo ticks off her favorite manga of 2011 in a number of different categories.

Alex Hoffman rounds up the manga news highlights of the year (as well as the Alex Hoffman news highlights—spoiler: He got a degree and got married) at Manga Widget.

Sean Gaffney rounds up the links from the final day of the Sailor Moon MMF.

Mike Toole jumps into the wayback machine and takes a look at the early, early days of manga.

Job Board: Viz Media is taking applications for internships.

News from Japan: Jormungand is coming to an end in the February issue of Sunday GX, but manga-ka Keitarō Takahashi already has a new series in the works. Switch creator Naked Ape (Saki Otoh) and Wolf God manga-ka Ai Tenkawa are working on a school comedy series, Kisshō7 -seven-, that launched in Monthly Comic Zero-Sum last week.

Reviews

Kristin on vol. 5 of The Story of Saiunkoku (Comic Attack)

New year, new look, new digs!

Happy new year! If you think things look a little different around here, you’re right: MangaBlog is now part of the Manga Bookshelf family of blogs, meaning I will be sharing internet space with my favorite manga bloggers—Kate Dacey, Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, David Welsh, and our fearless leader, Melinda Beasi. Melinda is an amazing webmaster (webmistress?) and I’m delighted that she will be handling all the technical bits that I don’t understand at all, and even better, I’m looking forward to participating in group discussions with my fellow Bookshelf bloggers.

Onward!

The second volume of Wandering Son is the highlight of this week’s new manga releases; Fantagraphics lists it as out next week, but ComicList listed it this week and Amazon shows it as available now. Crazy. The Manga Village team makes their picks, Lissa Pattillo surveys the latest manga in her On the Shelf column at Otaku USA, Lori Henderson has this week’s all-ages comics and manga at Good Comics for Kids, and Sean Gaffney, always one step ahead, is already looking at next week’s new manga.

We have many best-of-the-year lists! Deb Aoki lists her picks for the best continuing series of 2011, as well as the year’s big disappointments, and she also tallies the manga that the critics liked the best. Kate Dacey gives her top picks, plus a few near misses, at The Manga Critic. Ed Sizemore emerges from retirement to give his list of the best manga of 2011 at Comics Worth Reading. Victoria Martin gives her top five at Kuriousity. Erica Friedman posts her top ten yuri of 2011 at Okazu.

At The Manga Critic, Kate Dacey inducts five of this year’s series into her Manga Hall of Shame.

Derik Badman discusses some manga he enjoyed in 2011, including Nastume Ono’s House of Five Leaves.

Lori Henderson looks forward to 2012 with some thoughts on digital comics and managing her manga collection as well as an exhortation to JManga that I will second: Put some volume 2s on your site!!

It’s holiday time, and Jason Thompson relaxes with a look at Jiro Taniguchi’s Walking Man in this week’s House of 1000 Manga column at ANN.

Connie looks at manga that have a picture running across their spines at Slightly Biased Manga.

Three Steps Over Japan muses over whether Herge’s Tintin was one of Osamu Tezuka’s early influences.

Sean Gaffney rounds up the links for day one, days two and three, day four, day five, and day six of the Manga Moveable Feast, which features Sailor Moon. There are a lot of interesting articles, including Manga Bookshelf’s own Sailor Moon Roundtable, so go, click, read!

Meanwhile, Ash Brown is inviting everyone to participate in the next MMF, which will feature Usumaru Furuya.

Tell Ash Brown about your favorite magical girl manga, and you could win the first volume of Sailor Moon.

Erica Friedman made a last-minute trip to Winter Comiket; check out her photos and commentary here and here.

Reviews

Connie on Angel’s Coffin (Slightly Biased Manga)
Rebecca Silverman on vol. 8 of Arata: The Legend (ANN)
Connie on vol. 7 of Black Butler (Slightly Biased Manga)
Carlo Santos on vol. 16 of Black Jack (ANN)
Matthew Warner on vol. 37 of Bleach (The Fandom Post)
Sweetpea616 on vol. 3 of Cardcaptor Sakura (omnibus edition) (Organization Anti-Social Geniuses)
Connie on vol. 9 of Cipher (Slightly Biased Manga)
Connie on vol. 2 of Cross Game (Slightly Biased Manga)
Connie on vol. 4 of ES: Eternal Sabbath (Slightly Biased Manga)
Connie on vol. 5 of Kobato (Slightly Biased Manga)
Lissa Pattillo on vol. 5 of Kobato (Kuriousity)
Rebecca Silverman on vols. 1 and 2 of K-ON! (ANN)
Connie on vol. 3 of March Story (Slightly Biased Manga)
Connie on vols. 7 and 8 of Mars (Slightly Biased Manga)
Rebecca Silverman on Mr. Convenience (ANN)
Kate O’Neil on vol. 9 of Natsume’s Book of Friends (The Fandom Post)
Zack Davisson on Oishinbo A La Carte (Japan Reviewed)
Leroy Douresseaux on vol. 6 of Oresama Teacher (The Comic Book Bin)
Connie on vol. 3 of Please Please Me (Slightly Biased Manga)
Lesley Aeschliman on vol. 3 of Pokemon Adventures Diamond and Pearl Platinum (Blogcritics)
Connie on vol. 1 of Pokemon Black and White (Slightly Biased Manga)
Leroy Douresseaux on vol. 2 of Psyren (The Comic Book Bin)
Connie on vol. 3 of Redmoon (Slightly Biased Manga)
Connie on Rumic Theater (Slightly Biased Manga)
TSOTE on Sayonara Nippon (Three Steps Over Japan)
Connie on vol. 2 of Shadow Lady (Slightly Biased Manga)
Jocelyne Allen on Tatsumi (Brain Vs. Book)
Connie on A Truthful Picture (Slightly Biased Manga)
Carlo Santos on vol. 8 of Twin Spica (ANN)

Back to work!

Rob McMonigal lists his picks for the best manga of 2011 at Panel Patter. Dave Ferraro posts his top manga list at Comics-and-More, and it skews heavily toward Vertical titles (not that there’s anything wrong with that).

Sean Gaffney posts the links for the first day of the Sailor Moon Manga Moveable Feast.

News from Japan: Foxy Lady manga-ka Ayun Tachibana has a new series in the works, about two girls who trade places, for Manga Time Kirara Forward magazine.

Reviews: Ash Brown discusses a week’s worth of manga reading at Experiments in Manga.

Justin on vol. 1 of 7 Billion Needles (Organization Anti-Social Geniuses)
Nick Smith on vol. 1 of Dawn of the Arcana (ICv2)
Lori Henderson on vol. 18 of Hayate the Combat Butler (Manga Village)
Rob McMonigal on vols. 1-3 of I’ll Give It My All… Tomorrow (Panel Patter)
Leroy Douresseaux on vol. 12 of Kimi ni Todoke (The Comic Book Bin)
Lesley Aeschliman on vol. 1 of Magic Knight Rayearth (Blogcritics)

Best (and worst!) of 2011; Sailor Moon MMF launches

Daniella Orihuela-Gruber winds up her 2011 manga gift guide. While gift-giving season is pretty much over, it’s a good resource for those who are wondering what to do with all the gift cards they got.

Sean Gaffney looks back at the manga scene in 2011 and sees a mixed bag; he also has some wishes for the future. And congratulations to Sean on his second anniversary as a blogger! Sean is also hosting this month’s Manga Moveable Feast, which will feature Sailor Moon.

Erica Friedman posts her picks for the best yuri manga of 2011 and her wish list for 2012.

The Manga Village team picks the best of the past week’s new manga releases.

Ouch! Dave Ferraro includes Animal Land in his three worst comics of the year.

The China Post has a good overview of the comics scene in Taiwan, where Japanese manga are huge—so huge that Shueisha recently sponsored a new talent competition there, and the editor of Weekly Shonen Jump flew over for the awards ceremony.

News from Japan: Huge news for Rurouni Kenshin fans: Creator Nobuhiro Watsuki is bringing the series back in the June issue of Jump Square, at least for a few episodes. Three Steps Over Japan takes a look at the manga magazine Monthly Shonen Ace.

Reviews

Sakura Eries on vol. 2 of Ai Ore! (The Fandom Post)
Margaret O’Connell on Anesthesiologist Hana (Sequential Tart)
Connie on vol. 2 of Bad Teacher’s Equation (omnibus edition) (Slightly Biased Manga)
AstroNerdBoy on vol. 2 of A Certain Scientific Railgun (AstroNerdBoy’s Anime and Manga Blog)
Connie on vol. 19 of Claymore (Slightly Biased Manga)
Anna on vol. 8 of Dengeki Daisy (Manga Report)
Connie on Finder Series 05: Truth in the Viewfinder (Slightly Biased Manga)
Rebecca Silverman on vol. 16 of Higurashi: When They Cry (ANN)
Connie on vol. 11 of Kimi ni Todoke (Slightly Biased Manga)
Serdar Yegulalp on vol. 2 of No Longer Human (Genji Press)
Kristin on vol. 59 of One Piece and vol. 4 of Tenjho Tenge (Comic Attack)
Lori Henderson on vol. 2 of Oresama Teacher (Manga Xanadu)
Connie on vol. 2 of Redmoon (Slightly Biased Manga)
Kate Dacey on Stargazing Dog (The Manga Critic)
Leroy Douresseaux on vol. 4 of Tenjho Tenge (The Comic Book Bin)

Free Vampire Hunter D; new yaoi licenses

I took a look at this week’s new manga at MTV Geek, and Lissa Pattillo goes over her list in her latest On the Shelf column at Otaku USA. Sean Gaffney looks ahead to next week’s new releases at A Case Suitable for Treatment.

Here’s the deal of the holiday season: Digital is offering vols. 1-5 of Vampire Hunter D for free via its eManga site from December 24 through January 8. Volume 6 comes out on December 28, so I guess they want you to be caught up.

Two publishers announced new yaoi licenses this week: Viz has the license for the first three volumes of Yebisu Celebrities, which will be published digitally under its new SuBLime imprint (old-timers may remember that BeBeautiful had the license for this series at one time), and Digital just announced two new titles, Secretary’s Job and vol. 3 of Private Teacher. SuBLime also unveiled their shiny new website.

Gottsu-Iiyan posts some photos of artwork from Takehiko Inoue’s new book, Pepita: Inoue Takehiko Meets Gaudi.

News from Japan: Lots of new series are launching next month: Three new series based on older properties will launch in the March issue of Shonen Sunday (due out on Jan. 25): Colorful Hayate no Gotoku (Colorful Hayate the Combat Butler), Meitantei Conan: Seiki matsu no majutsushi (Case Closed: The Last Magician of the Century), and a new Mobile Suit Gundam AGE story. Yoshikazu Yasuhiko, who was the character designer for Mobile Suit Gundam and the artist for the Mobile Suit Gundam: The Origin manga, has started a new series of his own, Ten no Kechimyaku, a historical drama set in 1903, in the days before the Russo-Japanese war. It will launch in the March issue of Afternoon magazine. Monthly Shōnen Ace has announced a new series based on the television mystery series Hyoka and a Eureka Seven sequel. creator of Flowers of Evil and Drifting Net Cafe, is launching a new series, Shino-chan wa Jibun no Namae ga Ienai (Shino Can’t Say Her Own Name) in the online manga magazine Poco Poco.

In other news, Mainichi profiles Dr. Vivian Wijaya, an Indonesian doctor-turned-manga-ka whose first manga, Kokkyonaki Gakuen (Campus Dwellers Without Borders) debuted on Shogakukan’s Club Sunday website last month. Three Steps Over Japan takes a look at yet another seinen manga magazine, Young Champion. And ANN has the latest Japanese comics rankings.

Reviews: Melinda Beasi and Michelle Smith discuss some recent yaoi releases in their latest BL Bookrack column at Manga Bookshelf.

Connie on vol. 8 of Bakuman (Slightly Biased Manga)
Andre Paploo on vol. 11 of Bamboo Blade (Kuriousity)
Rebecca Silverman on vol. 1 of Dawn of the Arcana (ANN)
Leroy Douresseaux on vol. 27 of Fullmetal Alchemist (The Comic Book Bin)
Julie Opipari on vol. 2 of Gossip Girl: For Your Eyes Only (Manga Maniac Cafe)
Rebecca Silverman on vols. 1 and 2 of My Boyfriend is a Vampire (ANN)
Matthew Warner on vol. 59 of One Piece (The Fandom Post)
Kate O’Neil on vol. 7 of Pandora Hearts (The Fandom Post)
Lesley Aeschliman on vol. 2 of Pokemon: Black and White (Blogcritics)
Erica Friedman on vol. 7 of Rakuen Le Paradis (Okazu)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 10 of Sayonara, Zetsubou-Sensei (A Case Suitable for Treatment)
Anna on vol. 2 of Stellar Six of Gangacho (Manga Report)
TSOTE on vol. 2 of Yuukoku no Rasputin (Three Steps Over Japan)