Thursday update

In case you missed it yesterday, the big news was that Yen Press will no longer be publishing Yen Plus magazine in print; the manga anthology will go online, but there seem to be questions yet about how exactly that will work.

David Welsh winds up his shoujo-sunjeong alphabet with some books whose titles don’t start with a letter at all.

News from Japan: Kodansha is posting videos of manga-ka at work on its YouTube channel. Also, ANN has the latest Japanese comics rankings. GetBackers creators Yuya Aoki and Rando Ayamine are coming up with a new manga, Oniwaka to Ushiwaka: Edge of the World.

Reviews

Eric Robinson on vol. 8 of Black God (Manga Jouhou)
Eva Volin on vol. 1 of Bunny Drop (ICv2)
Kate Dacey on vol. 4 of Choco Mimi (Good Comics for Kids)
Ken Haley on vol. 1 of Deadman Wonderland (Manga Recon)
Leroy Douresseaux on vol. 1 of Flower in a Storm (The Comic Book Bin)
Connie on vol. 14 of The Gentlemen’s Alliance+ (Slightly Biased Manga)
Kristin on How to Seduce a Vampire (Comic Attack)
Tangognat on vol. 3 of Karakuri Odette (Tangognat)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 1 of Kingyo Used Books (A Case Suitable for Treatment)
Shawn O’Rourke on Lone Wolf and Cub (Pop Matters)
Carlo Santos on vol. 4 of Maid Sama! (ANN)
Shaenon Garrity on vol. 1 of My Darling Miss Bancho! (About.com)
Eduardo Zacarias on vol. 24 of One Piece (Animanga Nation)
Chris Zimmerman on vols. 24-25 of One Piece (cbs4.com)
Danielle Leigh on vol. 1 of Otodama: Voice from the Dead (Comics Should Be Good)
Shannon Fay on Physical Attraction (Kuriousity)
Carlo Santos on vol. 8 of Pluto (ANN)
Eva Volin on vol. 1 of Stepping on Roses (ICv2)
Michelle Smith on vol. 1 of There’s Something About Sunyool (Manga Recon)
Connie on vol. 4 of Venus in Love (Slightly Biased Manga)

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Breaking news: Yen Plus goes online only, Croquis replacements on the way

Two things, quickly: Yen Plus magazine is ending its print edition and going to a digital-only format. Kurt Hassler breaks the news at the Yen Press site.

Also: If you are one of the people who got a faulty copy of Croquis—some copies had some of the pages printed in German—and requested a replacement, your wait is over. I checked in with Tokyopop marketing director Marco Pavia and he said there was a delay due to coordination between the printer and the warehouse, but he has good news:

I just got confirmation that the CROQUIS books will definitely be physically put in the mail next week. I’ll tweet on the day it’s leaving our hands next week. (There are probably a few hundred that sent us in a proof of purchase from a defective copy; we’re going to add a little something extra as a small thank you for everyone’s patience.)

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Queenie Chan, Carl Macek, and more Dark Horse news

I’m still busy with post-con duties, but I wrapped up my impressions of C2E2 at Robot 6, and Michael May has a nice post on the bloggers’ panel, which I participated in along with Johanna Draper Carlson, Heidi MacDonald, and a host of other luminaries. I covered the Mike Mignola panel for CBR and the kids’ comics scene for PWCW.

The Sydney Morning Herald takes a look at the Australian comics scene, including an interview with Queenie Chan, creator of The Dreaming and artist for the Odd Thomas graphic novels.

It’s that time of the week again, and Kate Dacey, Gia Manry, and David Welsh take a look at this week’s new releases. Kate also looks at the Free Comic Book Day offerings and notes the absence of manga—quite a difference from a few years ago.

On the other hand, I reported the other day that Dark Horse is resurrecting the print version of its Dark Horse Presents comics, and Gia checked in with them and learned that the comics will include manga, although no titles have been revealed yet.

Sean Kleefeld notes that the movie Manga Mad is available on Hulu.

Lori Henderson shares her personal memories of anime pioneer Carl Macek, who passed away recently.

Reviews

Zack Davisson on vol. 1 of Black Butler (Manga Life)
Tom Langston on vol. 1 of Diamond Girl (Nigorimasen!)
Sam Kusek on vols. 1 and 2 of Dinosaur King (Manga Recon)
Bill Sherman on vol. 1 of Dorohedoro (Blogcritics)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 31 of Eyeshield 21 (A Case Suitable for Treatment)
Susan S. on Happiness Recommended (Manga Jouhou)
Todd Douglass on vol. 3 of Karakuri Odette (Anime Maki)
Ed Sizemore on vol. 1 of One Fine Day (Comics Worth Reading)
Todd Douglass on vol. 10 of One Thousand and One Nights (Anime Maki)
Ysabet Reinhardt MacFarlane on vol. 20 of Skip Beat (Manga Life)
Lissa Pattillo on vol. 8 of Yotsuba&! (Kuriousity)
Erica Friedman on vol. 12 of Yuri Hime S (Okazu)

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News and commentary

Melinda Beasi brings us up to date on the manhwa scene in her latest Manhwa Monday post at Manga Bookshelf. Lori Henderson has the week’s manga news at Manga Xanadu. And Erica Friedman brings another edition of Yuri Network News at Okazu.

Roland Kelts was at Anime Boston the day the iPad launched, and he talks to Fred Schodt and Ed Chavez about how it may change the manga marketplace here and abroad.

Ryan Holmberg pens an essay on the early days of Garo magazine, in tandem with the exhibit that’s up right now at the Center for Book Arts in New York.

Mio Ozaki profiles Inio Asano, the creator of solanin and What a Wonderful World.

David Welsh helps the Kodansha USA folks by focusing on some Kodansha manga he’d like to see.

Jason S. Yadao files his con reports from Kawaii Kon, with plenty of photos (day 1, day 2, day 3).

Reviews: The Manga Recon crew kicks off the week with a fresh crop of Manga Minis and some quick takes on recent Shojo Beat releases. David Welsh looks at some second volumes at Precocious Curmudgeon.

Connie on vol. 3 of 13th Boy (Slightly Biased Manga)
A Library Girl on vol. 9 of After School Nightmare (A Library Girl’s Familiar Diversions)
Erin Jones on vols. 1 and 2 of Alice in the Country of Hearts (Mania.com)
Julie Opipari on vol. 3 of Animal Academy (Manga Maniac Cafe)
Andrew Wheeler on Black Blizzard (Antick Musings)
Eric Robinson on vols. 6 and 7 of Black God (Manga Jouhou)
Tangognat on vol. 1 of Bunny Drop (Tangognat)
Connie on vol. 2 of Butterflies, Flowers (Slightly Biased Manga)
Tangognat on vol. 2 of Butterflies, Flowers (Tangognat)
Connie on vol. 5 of Cipher (Slightly Biased Manga)
Susan S. on Croquis (Manga Jouhou)
Kristin on vol. 1 of Crown of Love (Comic Attack)
Charles Webb on vol. 4 of Detroit Metal City (Manga Life)
Kate Dacey on vol. 1 of Diamond Girl (The Manga Critic)
Jones (welcome back!) on A Drifting Life (Let’s you and him fight)
Todd Douglass on Fruits Basket: Banquet (Anime Maki)
Connie on vols. 1, 2, and 3 of The Gentlemen’s Alliance+ (Slightly Biased Manga)
Zaki Zakaria on Haru Hana: The Complete Collection (The Star of Malaysia)
Leroy Douresseaux on vol. 14 of Hayate the Combat Butler (The Comic Book Bin)
Andre on vol. 2 of Hero Tales (Kuriousity)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 9 of I Hate You More Than Anyone! (A Case Suitable for Treatment)
Kate Dacey on vol. 1 of Kingyo Used Books (The Manga Critic)
Leroy Douresseaux on vol. 2 of Kurashina Sensei’s Passion (The Comic Book Bin)
Max Loh on vol. 3 of Maid Sama! (The Star of Malaysia)
Leroy Douresseaux on vol. 4 of Maid Sama! (The Comic Book Bin)
Sesho on vol. 47 of Naruto (Sesoh’s Anime and Manga Reviews)
Andrew Wheeler on vol. 3 of Nightschool (Antick Musings)
Sesho on vol. 1 of One Piece (Sesho’s Anime and Manga Reviews)
Connie on vols. 41, 42, and 43 of One Piece (Slightly Biased Manga)
Oyceter on vols. 4-6 of Pluto (Sakura of DOOM)
James Fleenor on vol. 1 of Portrait of M&N (Anime Sentinel)
Kitty Sensei on Ristorante Paradiso (The Star of Malaysia)
Connie on vol. 2 of Seimaden (Slightly Biased Manga)
Lori Henderson on vol. 1 of Stolen Hearts (Manga Xanadu)
Erica Friedman on vol. 1 of To Aru Kagaku no Railgun (Okazu)
Martin on Town of Evening Calm, Country of Cherry Blossoms (Mono no aware)
Tim Maughan on vol. 1 of Twin Spica (tim maughan books)
Julie Opipari on vol. 1 of Twin Spica (Manga Maniac Cafe)
Connie on vol. 6 of Vagabond (Slightly Biased Manga)
Andre on vol. 4 of Vampire Hunter D (Kuriousity)
James Fleenor on vol. 1 of What a Wonderful World! (Anime Sentinel)
Billy Aguiar on The World I Create (Prospero’s Manga)

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Back from the midwest…

I’m back from C2E2 and almost recovered. It was a great con, but there was almost no manga there. I’m saying “almost” because Del Rey’s Ali T. Kokmen was there, and we chatted a bit, but there were no panels or publisher booths. Everyone at the show was having a good time, though, and it was a much calmer, nicer atmosphere than NYCC, so maybe next year.

Oh, I also talked to Dark Horse marketing director Jeremy Atkins about the CLAMP mangettes, and he said they were focusing on doing a good job with the omnibus editions of CLAMP’s older work before diving into anything new.

And I went to the ICv2 White Paper presentation, in which they noted that manga sales are down, not surprising as manga releases are down as well. Comics maven Milton Greipp speculated that one reason was that girls have shifted from shoujo manga to Twilight, and he also pointed out that Cartoon Network isn’t showing much anime these days. I’ll try to parse out those numbers a little better later in the week.

My other C2E2 coverage was not manga-specific, but check it out anyhow: Talked to Carla Speed McNeil, Brad Guigar, Amy Mebberson, a bunch of creators, and another bunch of creators, and covered the Oni Press and BOOM! Studios panels. Yes, I was in the same room with Brobee from Yo Gabba Gabba! That alone was probably worth the trip.

Curious about Kodansha USA’s rather desultory debut—two reprints, nothing since then, no website, next volumes pushed back—Gia Manry went straight to the source and asked KUSA general manager Kumi Shimizu about it. The response was fairly vague but suggests that yes, they are in business here for the long haul; it’s just taking them a while to sort things out.

Meanwhile, back in Japan, the editors of Kodansha’s Weekly Morning magazine have announced the list of comics that made the first cut in their Morning International Comics Competition.

A site called Tsurupeta says that Google has delisted a lolicon doujinshi site because of a complaint that it was hosting child porn. The complaint appears to be false (but possibly plausible). Simon Jones explains why this is a bad thing for all involved.

Lissa Pattillo takes a look at manga about making manga at Kuriousity.

Check this out: Vertical just posted a 30-page preview of Twin Spica. The first volume will be out next month.

Manga-ka Akindo Kondoh, who is a contributor to the underground anthology AX, will be speaking in New York on April 21 in connection with the “Garo Manga, 1964-1973” exhibit at The Center for Book Arts.

More podcast! Ed Sizemore and Johanna Draper Carlson discuss Pluto in the latest episode of Manga Out Loud.

David Welsh winds up his shoujo-sunjeong alphabet at The Manga Curmudgeon with a look at manga that start with the letter Z.

News from Japan: The 14th annual Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize winners have been announced, and Thermae Romae picks up its second prize of the year. And the editors of Weekly Shonen Jump are publishing an open letter to their readers regarding bootleg manga, stating that “the unauthorized online copies do harm to the manga culture, the manga creators’ rights, and above all, the manga creators’ spirits.” (ANN’s translation.) And this sidenote is an interesting twist:

In another development, the raw-paradise.com website, which hosted scanned copies of manga magazines without permission, currently redirects to Shueisha’s website.

Coincidence? I think not!

Reviews: Ysabet Reinhardt MacFarlane has short takes on manga she’s reading at Manga Life.

Erica Friedman on vol. 3 of Comic Lily (Okazu)
Kate Dacey on vol. 1 of Diamond Girl (The Manga Critic)
Danica Davidson on vol. 1 of Nabari no Ou (About.com)
Sarah Boslaugh on vol. 1 of Ninja Girls and vol. 2 of ES: Eternal Sabbath (PLAYBACK:stl)
Leroy Douresseaux on vol. 6 of Gestalt (The Comic Book Bin)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 5 of Gunsmith Cats Burst (A Case Suitable for Treatment)
Danielle Leigh on vol. 4 of Honey Hunt (Comics Should Be Good)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 4 of Maid-Sama! (A Case Suitable for Treatment)
Sean Gaffney on vols. 42 and 43 of One Piece (A Case Suitable for Treatment)
Zack Davisson on vol. 2 of Soul Eater (Manga Life)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 1 of Stepping on Roses (A Case Suitable for Treatment)
Ai Kano on vol. 2 of Tegami Bachi: Letter Bee (Animanga Nation)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 8 of Yotsuba&! (A Case Suitable for Treatment)
Ed Sizemore on vol. 8 of Yotsuba&! (Comics Worth Reading)
Susan S. on vol. 3 of Ze (Manga Jouhou)

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Guest Review: You’re So Cool, vols. 1-6

ysc1You’re So Cool, vols. 1-6
By YoungHee Lee
Rated T, for Teens
Yen Press $10.99

Review by Melinda Beasi

Tomboyish Nan-Woo is the class klutz. Impulsive, accident-prone, and chronically late, she provides a daily dose of schadenfreude for her eager classmates. Seung-Ha is the class prince. Gorgeous, mature, and kind to everyone, he is admired by students and faculty alike. After Nan-Woo pays accidental witness to Seung-Ha’s rejection of a pretty upperclassman, Seung-Ha explains to her that he’s looking for someone who will accept all of him, “even the dark and selfish parts,” at which point Nan-Woo naïvely proclaims, “If I had the chance, I wouldn’t care. I would love you completely and without regret.”

These prove to be fateful words indeed, for though Nan-Woo is granted her dream boyfriend faster than even most fairy godmothers could reasonably manage, she quickly discovers that the boy she so admires is nothing more than an elaborately constructed fantasy. Though his model-student act is impressively well-practiced, out of uniform Seung-Ha is a bona fide thug who belittles Nan-Woo, bullies her into buying his meals, and gleefully sends her off to be tortured by his ruthless fan club.

Now that she’s met the real Seung-Ha, can Nan-Woo possibly live up to her own rash promise?

Yes, yes, your groans are audible from here, and with a premise like that it’s difficult to protest. Even by the end of the second volume, there’s not much grounds for defense. Though Nan-Woo displays more genuine spunk and idiosyncratic charm than her typical Japanese counterpart, it’s hard to invest in even the spunkiest heroine when she’s willing to be pushed around by her sneering, bad-boy love interest for more than a panel or two. Even as Seung-Ha’s growing attachment to Nan-Woo begins to erode his class president persona, it’s unsatisfying as long as Nan-Woo remains in his control.

Fortunately, midway through the series’ third volume, Lee forgets that she’s writing a hopelessly clichéd, emotionally-backwards romance and gets caught up in the real heart of the story: how people (especially families) shape each other, for better or worse.

This begins with an affectionate look at Nan-Woo’s unconventional (but loving) parental figures. Nan-Woo’s mother, Jae-Young, a badass guitarist with a decidely masculine frame, is objectively terrifying and fiercely protective of her daughter. Though Nan-Woo’s father is absent (and apparently unknown), their household is rounded out by Nan-Woo’s uncle, Jay, an unselfconsciously feminine homemaker who acts as the nurturer of the family. Though this familial grouping is clearly presented as a happy one, as individuals they each have their own issues. Jae-Young is habitually inconsiderate and prone to violence, and Jay will do almost anything to avoid being alone. Interestingly, though their weaknesses factor heavily into the person Nan-Woo will one day be, they are perhaps more responsible for her strengths than anything else.

In contrast, the weaknesses and failures of Seung-Ha’s family have contributed mainly to warping his personality. As the illegitimate child of a wealthy businessman, Seung-Ha was abandoned by his self-involved mother as a middle-schooler and taken into his father’s household. There, an environment of cold antipathy taught him to mask his true existence just to survive. Though this could easily be played as a “poor little rich boy” scenario in order to gain sympathy for the misunderstood bad-boy, it is actually in studying Nan-Woo’s family that Seung-Ha is humanized rather than through his own sad circumstances.

Though she herself fights with Nan-Woo on a daily basis, it is the attitude of Nan-Woo’s mom that is key in influencing reader concern. Her ability to see through Seung-Ha’s façade and her outrage over his unprecedented control of her free-spirited daughter implies a harsh authorial judgement unusual for this type of story. Instead of preaching the coolness of her bad-boy love interest, through the eyes of Jae-Young, Lee calls Seung-Ha out on every move from his pathetically manipulative playbook, assuring readers that there is no way this guy is going to make time with Nan-Woo unless he figures out how to shape up. This assurance makes it easier to let go of our deeply ingrained feminist reflexes and view Seung-Ha (and by extension, everyone else) as an individual rather than an archetype. Suddenly, all of Lee’s characters are relatable, even in their worst moments, and it’s hard to write off anyone as just another (insert your cliché here).

It is this move, more than anything, that frees You’re So Cool from its origins in bad-boy romanticism. By viewing her characters through sharp, honest eyes, Lee gives them the context they need to shed their relationship’s worst clichés, or at least diminish their meaning. Though the story continues to follow the basic structure of teen romance, at its core it’s a examination of friendship between two fumbling teenagers who, despite a foundation of false pretense, become important influences in each other’s lives, mainly for the better. That the story’s secondary romance (between Jay and a quiet loner he meets at the grocery store) ends up stealing most of the series’ romantic thunder is likely no mistake, leaving room for Nan-Woo and Seung-Ha’s relationship to take a more ambiguous path.

The series’ transformation does have its share of stumbles. Lee’s ambition occasionally exceeds her skill, especially when she’s trying too hard to dig deep. A sequence in the final volume, for instance, featuring Seung-Ha in a drawn-out mental showdown with his pre-teen self, reads as contrived and convoluted rather than insightful. Through most of the series’ later volumes, however, Lee maintains a solid thread of lighthearted humor that keeps her from sinking too far into depths she’s not quite ready to tackle.

The series’ character designs are typical of Yen Press’ girls’ manhwa line, with its characters’ thickly-lined eyes, full lips, and delicate, pointed chins. And though even Lee’s most beautiful characters can’t quite achieve the delectable pout mastered by Goong‘s Park SoHee, Lee more than makes up for it with her heroine’s pug-nosed, tomboy glower, which is just as expressive and miles more fun. Her visual storytelling is energetic and easy to follow, and her use of dramatic imagery for humorous effect is key in establishing the series’ breezy, lighthearted tone.

Though it would be difficult to recommend the series’ early volumes on their own, for those willing to commit to the not-so-long haul, You’re So Cool offers a lot to enjoy.

This review is based on review copies supplied by the publisher.

Read more from Melinda Beasi at her blog, Manga Bookshelf

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