Sunday news

Jog has a post about the recent Air Gear controversy, in which he reflects on fans complaining about a bit of dialogue being altered in a book that shows four women (three underage) naked in the shower.

The quest for authenticity and the demands of fans and the power of success has lead to a new status quo, where plastic-wrapped books can indulge in such eyebrow-raising antics for better or worse, and still somehow prompt a minor controversy over tiny alterations. Wild days.

Well worth a read.

ANN has a brief interview with Kaoru Mori, the manga-ka of Emma.

Lyle wonders why Tokyopop is accused of flooding the market with manga when Viz releases just as many books.

Remember Mangaquake, the UK manga anthology that had to pull an issue because the cover turned out to be stolen art? They have re-released that issue, with a new cover.

Yaoi-Con 2006 announces its schedule.

The Nichi Bei Times (“Japanese American news since 1946”) takes a look at global manga. (Via Manganews.)

ChunHyang72 appeals to readers and fans to save CLAMP no Kiseki.

Volume 2 of Mark of the Succubus is due out this fall, and editor Lillian Diaz-Pryzbyl has some fun facts.

It’s a plot point that Maeve has gawdawful fashion sense.

Glad to hear it isn’t intentional. Also that Lillian quickly scotched one of the proposed titles for the series, “Get on the ‘Bus.”

Mangapunk takes a dim view of Borders manga buyer Kurt Hassler moonlighting as a manga-ka:

While Borders is a great avenue to sell manga, they only have so much shelf space to devote to all the Manga and Graphic Novels out there. So it’s very important to a company to get their titles onto that limited shelf space. So not only is Mr. Hassler able to fill those shelves with his manga he can also fill those same shelves with manga from the companies that gave him publishing jobs.

And even if that isn’t happening, there certainly is the appearance of a conflict of interest.

Tokyopop editor-in-chief Rob Tokar pimps Afterlife.

About Brigid Alverson

Brigid Alverson has been reading comics since she was 4. After earning an MFA in printmaking, she headed to New York to become a famous artist but ended up working with words instead of pictures, first as a book editor and later as a newspaper reporter. She started MangaBlog to keep track of her daughters’ reading habits and now covers manga, comics and graphic novels as a freelancer for School Library Journal, Publishers Weekly Comics Week, Comic Book Resources, the Barnes & Noble Sci-Fi & Fantasy Blog, and Robot 6. She also edits the Good Comics for Kids blog at School Library Journal. Now settled in the outskirts of Boston, Brigid is married to a physicist and has two daughters.
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6 Responses to Sunday news

  1. Estara says:

    This is what I get when I try to read the entry you linked to, by editor Lillian Diaz-Pryzbyl:

    “LillianDP’s Blog

    This entry has been marked as inappropriate.”

    So, does Tokyopop finally moderate their blogs? Or is this just in-house censorhip, or did she regret what she wrote?

    Off-Topic, but it fits with the not being able to read something: Sometimes you forget to add the links of the articles you try to link, so I mouse-over but can’t get there ^^.

  2. Brigid says:

    That’s really weird, as I was able to get to it from her main blog page. Try this URL:

    http://www.tokyopop.com/LillianDP/blog/8879.html

    I think she might have double-posted as it showed up twice in my RSS feed.

    Sorry about the broken links—I do my HTML coding by hand, and if I make a typo, it still shows up looking like a link. I used to be able to check them in my previewer but that doesn’t work any more. (I hate when they “improve” software that was fine to begin with, and wreck it in the process.) I’ll be more careful from now on.

    I’ll change the link in the post as well.

  3. Pingback: Journalista » Blog Archive » Sept. 11, 2006: The ungrateful wretch

  4. LillianDP says:

    Yeah, I double-posted somehow. :-) Sorry for the confusion!

  5. Tivome says:

    Oh Emma.. such a sweet manga. It takes a Japanese female manga-ka to do great Victorian Romance nowdays. Mori Kaoru’s one manga-ka I won’t mind lining up to see.

  6. ChunHyang72 says:

    Thanks, as always, for the linkage and the support!

Comments are closed.