Manga invades Angoulême

The Angoulême comics festival is just wrapping up in France, and manga seems to have played a prominent part. Riyoko Ikeda, creator of The Rose of Versailles, was a guest of honor, and she sang at the palace of Versailles. An entire section of the festival was dedicated to underground manga by female creators, and there is an entire website, Mangouleme (in French) devoted to the manga happenings at Angoulême.

Melinda Beasi is joining the Digital Manga Guild and plans to write about her experiences there.

Alex Hoffman (possibly NSFW) looks at Manga Taisho Award winners he’d like to see in English.

David Welsh kicks off his josei alphabet at The Manga Curmudgeon with the letter A.

Lissa Pattillo is asking her readers to suggest chibis (-tans) to represent the different manga publishers.

News from Japan: The publisher Kodansha has asked the Chinese portal Baidu to remove manga from their site that have been posted without permission, and Shueisha has told Apple it wants puzzles based on One Piece illustrations and music, also unauthorized, to be removed from the iTunes store. And the manga creator Kazoku Takahashi (Minami no Kazoku) has died.

Reviews: Carlo Santos takes a look at another batch of new releases in his latest Right Turn Only!! column at ANN.

Connie C. on vol. 2 of Ai no Kusabi (Comics Village)
Mark Thomas on vol. 1 of Chobits (omnibus edition) (Mania.com)
Anna on vol. 3 of Demon Sacred (Manga Report)
Todd Douglass on vol. 11 of Higurashi When They Cry (Anime Maki)
Leroy Douresseaux on vol. 50 of Naruto (The Comic Book Bin)
Oyceter on vols. 3 and 4 of Nightschool (Sakura of DOOM)
James Fleenor on vol. 2 of Ratman (Anime Sentinel)
Emily on Sensei ni Ageru (Emily’s Random Shoujo Manga Page)

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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