Alcoholics, listaholics, xxxHoLiC

I spent a portion of the weekend at the American Library Association Midwinter meeting, and you can read my impressions of the exhibit floor at Good Comics for Kids. And at Robot 6, we all chat about what we are reading this week.

Lori Henderson posts a handy digest of the week’s manga news, with plenty of links for those who missed it the first time around, at Manga Xanadu.

The latest NY Times Graphic Books Best-Seller List is up, and vol. 4 of Yu-Gi-Oh GX is in the number one slot.

The Hooded Utilitarian will be holding a roundtable on xxxHoLiC all week, and Vom Marlowe kicks it off with an introduction to the series.

David Welsh bellies up to the bar and asks that someone please license Bartender.

Matt Blind ranks upcoming releases several different ways at Rocket Bomber.

Heavy meta: Lots of people are writing about writing lately. Deb Aoki tweeted some tips for reviewers on Twitter, and Anime Miz compiled them and the ensuing conversation into two posts for our convenience. David Welsh has some excellent advice for journalists who are covering manga for the first time. And then Erica Friedman summed it all up and added some advice of her own on why—and why not—to blog at Okazu.

Jouhou Sisou, the Manga Jouhou blog, has relaunched under new leadership.

News from Japan: Vol. 12 of Descendants of Darkness will be out soon, just 8 years after the previous volume. A Zhu Zhu pets manga and anime are in the works. And 10 manga have been nominated for this year’s Manga Taisho awards; none are published in English, although Bakuman is on the way. Gia has an amusing report on Kodansha’s newest manga magazine at Anime Vice.

Reviews: The Manga Recon team checks out Natsume’s Book of Friends and several other titles in their latest On the Shojo Beat column. Johanna Draper Carlson posts some short reviews of recent manga at Comics Worth Reading.

Ed Sizemore on vol. 6 of 20th Century Boys (Comics Worth Reading)
Michelle Smith on vol. 1 of Adolf: A Tale of the Twentieth Century (Soliloquy in Blue)
Holly Ellingwood on All My Darling Daughters (Active Anime)
David Welsh on All My Darling Daughters (Precocious Curmudgeon)
Lorena Nava Ruggero on vol. 2 of Black Bird (i heart manga)
Johanna Draper Carlson on vol. 33 of Case Closed (Comics Worth Reading)
Lori Henderson on vol. 1 of Deka Kyoshi (Manga Xanadu)
Cynthia on Dog X Cat (Boys Next Door)
Danielle Leigh on Dog X Cat and La Satanica (Comics Should Be Good)
Sam Kusek on Domu: A Child’s Dream (Manga Recon)
Connie on vol. 5 of Gestalt (Slightly Biased Manga)
Kate Dacey on vol. 8 of Honey and Clover and vol. 6 of Mixed Vegetables (The Manga Critic)
Sandra Scholes on vol. 1 of I Shall Never Return (Active Anime)
Tangognat on vol. 1 of Land of Silver Rain (Tangognat)
Johanna Draper Carlson on vol. 16 of Love*Com (Comics Worth Reading)
Cynthia on Love Full of Scars (Boys Next Door)
Connie on Mazinger (Slightly Biased Manga)
Michelle Smith on vol. 7 of Monkey High (Soliloquy in Blue)
Carl Kimlinger on vol. 8 of Monkey High (ANN)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 1 of Natsume’s Book of Friends (A Case Suitable For Treatment)
Connie on not simple (Slightly Biased Manga)
Leroy Douresseaux on not simple (The Comic Book Bin)
Scott Campbell on Oishinbo a la Carte: Izakaya: Pub Food (Active Anime)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 28 of One Piece (A Case Suitable For Treatment)
Melinda Beasi on vol. 5 of Otomen (Manga Bookshelf)
Lorena Nava Ruggero on vol. 6 of The Palette of 12 Secret Colors (i heart manga)
Connie on vol. 4 of Papillon (Slightly Biased Manga)
Julie on The Prince’s Heir (Manga Maniac Cafe)
Scott Campbell on vol. 7 of Real (Active Anime)
Diana Dang on vols. 1 and 2 of The Recipe for Gertrude (Stop, Drop, and Read!)
Leroy Douresseaux on vol. 2 of Rin-ne (The Comic Book Bin)
Oyceter on vols. 1-10 of Sailor Moon (Chinese translation) (Sakura of DOOM)
Lorena Nava Ruggero on vol. 1 of The Seven Magi (i heart manga)
Julie on vol. 7 of Shaman Warrior (Manga Maniac Cafe)
Adam Stephanides on Solanin (The Comics Journal)
Rob on Solfege (Panel Patter)
Rob on vol. 6 of Tarot Cafe (Panel Patter)
Russell on Town of Evening Calm, Country of Cherry Blossoms (Manga Jouhou)
Leroy Douresseaux on vol. 31 of Vagabond (The Comic Book Bin)
Carlo Santos on Witchblade Takeru Manga Collection(ANN)
Eden Zacarias on vol. 1 of X-Men: Misfits (Animanga Nation)
AstroNerdBoy on vol. 5 of Yotsuba&! (AstroNerdBoy’s Anime and Manga Blog)

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Meta: Comics criticism and a confession

Jason Thompson and I can write better comics criticism drunk than any of these guys can do sober. We filmed ourselves doing it once, but we never aired it because of all the swears.

Shaenon Garrity

At The Hooded Utilitarian, Ng Suat Tong presents a juried list of the best online comics criticism of 2009. I encourage you to go and look at the list and read the pieces.

And now, it’s true confessions time: I was asked to be one of the jurors for that discussion. I submitted a list of nominees, but I didn’t cast my final votes. Work and family pressures simply combined to make it impossible for me to read through all the nominated works in the time allotted. Suat and fellow blogger Noah Berlatsky have been very understanding about this, and I appreciate their kindness. I also was honored to be asked to begin with. The nominated works were from all over the comics spectrum, and reading the ones that I did greatly expanded my horizons—even when I wasn’t interested in the comics being covered, I still learned something from the analysis.

When the list came out, Johanna Draper Carlson noted the lack of women and manga writers, and Melinda Beasi and David Welsh compiled lists of their own.

So, in the spirit of transparency, here is my list:

Carlo Santos on vol. 5 of Black Jack (ANN)
Bad Jew on 20th Century Boys (Sleep Is For the Weak)
Bad Jew on Oishinbo (Sleep Is For the Weak)
Kate Dacey on vol. 1 of Children of the Sea (The Manga Critic)
David Welsh on recent works by Jiro Taniguchi (The Comics Reporter)
Kate Dacey on vols. 1-3 of Dororo (The Manga Critic)
David Welsh on Omukae Desu and Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Service (The Comics Reporter)
Shaenon Garrity on All the Comics in the World: Dykes to Watch Out For (Comixology)
Shaenon Garrity on All the Comics in the World: SF (Comixology)
Noah Berlatsky on Mystery Train (Comixology)

Now, I was under a lot of work and family pressure when I compiled the list, and if I were to do it this week, with the holidays and the city inaugural over with and my kids out of town, I would have made a few addenda—I can’t tell you why Jason Thompson’s article on moe and Matt Thorn’s critique of translation aren’t there, other than that I was frazzled and forgot them. (Fortunately, they were nominated by other judges.) Also, Noah’s piece had to be disqualified because he is one of the judges. Duh.

Because the commentary around this has been really interesting, here are the lists from the other judges:

Frank Santoro
Tucker Stone
Matthias Wivel

What have I learned from this, other than not to make too many commitments at holiday time? That there is a lot of well thought out, well written comics criticism online, and that even an essay about something I never read can be interesting. By highlighting articles I never would read in my daily life, Noah and Suat have done me a big favor, and I am grateful for their efforts.

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Jason Thompson, Mike Gombos, and Dan Hipp walk into a blog post…

Lori Henderson lists this week’s all-ages comics and manga at Good Comics for Kids.

Deb Aoki talks to Jason Thompson and Victor Hao, the creators of King of RPGs, at About.com. And you can see some sample pages here.

Comic Attack has a nice interview up with Michael Gombos, Dark Horse’s director of Asian licensing.

Alex Dueben talks to Dan Hipp about the future of Gyakushu! at Comic Book Resources.

There seem to be some signs of life at DramaQueen, but we’ll reserve further comment until someone sees an actual book.

David Welsh posts his picks for the best online comics criticism of 2009 and invites others to add their choices in comments.

Gottsu-Iiyan takes a look at Takehiko Inoue’s covers for Vagabond and how his art has evolved over the years.

Matt Blind posts the top 500 manga (online sales) for the week of Jan. 3 as well as his ranking of new releases and preorders.

Same Hat has some Shintaro Kago gag comics for you (NSFW).

Manga Jouhou unveils a handy resource: A list of Japanese publishers and their websites.

People are talking about Graphic.ly, a new program for reading comics on computers. I haven’t looked into it yet, but at Anime Vice, Gia is already considering how it would work with manga.

Tangognat is giving away a copy of Love Hurts; click here for further instructions.

News from Japan: It’s bleak out there. Shuho Sato, creator of Say Hello to Black Jack, recently posted that a major publisher of manga and other magazines lost several billion yen in 2009, and he predicted the demise of three top-selling series. Matt Alt translates a blog post by Negima creator Ken Akamatsu about an interesting phenomenon: Tankoubon sales are down, but the top sellers are doing OK; the problem is with the lesser-known titles, which aren’t doing well and therefore are unlikely to find an audience. At the Icarus blog, Simon Jones blames it on the internet, but it’s not what you think. As always, Simon’s thoughts are well worth reading. In other news, Mizuki Kawashita, creator of Ichigo 100%, is bringing her other manga, Anedoki, to an end this month. And ANN has the latest comics rankings.

Reviews: Kate Dacey reviews recent volumes of Inubaka: Crazy for Dogs, Rosario + Vampire, and Slam Dunk at The Manga Critic.

Jennifer Leblanc on Dog X Cat (The Yaoi Review)
Leroy Douresseaux on vol. 22 of Fullmetal Alchemist (The Comic Book Bin)
Vom Marlowe on Godchild (The Hooded Utilitarian)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 1 of Happy Cafe (A Case Suitable for Treatment)
Connie on vol. 4 of Ikigami (Slightly Biased Manga)
Sterg Botzakis on Japan Ai: A Tall Girl’s Adventures in Japan (Graphic Novel Resources)
Melinda Beasi on vol. 1 of King of RPGs (About.com)
Connie on vol. 1 of Kurashina Sensei’s Passion (Manga Recon)
Jack T. on vol. 1 of Moyasimon: Tales of Agriculture (MangaCast)
Lorena Nava Ruggero on vol. 2 of Ooku (MangaCast)
Erica Freidman on Otome Ouji ~ Joshikou Manken Host Club (Okazu)
Julie on vol. 2 of Rin-ne (Manga Maniac Cafe)
Lissa Pattillo on vol. 1 of Shinobi Life (Kuriousity)

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New Tezuka, the problem with weeklies, and Hokusai manga

Lissa Pattillo figured out Vertical’s newest license: It’s Osamu Tezuka’s Ayako.

Gottsu-Iiyan argues that easing the weekly schedule for manga serials would be better for manga creators—and ultimately for manga as well.

Curtis Hoffmann takes a look at Hokusai Manga, which is sort of a sketchbook of cartoons by the artist best known for his “Thirty-six views of Mount Fuji.” The drawings are informal, black-and-white, and grouped by subject matter; they aren’t sequential art, but they are interesting to look at.

Melinda Beasi lists five women manga critics whose work she enjoys. I’m flattered to be included on the list, and I encourage you to check out all the writers she links to.

David Welsh encourages his readers to read Real (me too!) and presents the latest episode of the Shoujo-Sunjeong Alphabet, the letter N.

Sho Murase shares a snippet of some Star Wars art on her blog.

Deb Aoki spotlights two new shows at the Cartoon Art Museum in San Francisco, featuring Bat-Manga and samurai.

Congratulations to Manga Jouhou, which has just completed its 7th year of providing manga news and reviews. Editor Jason Punda is celebrating with seven site upgrades, including a new format for reviews and a dedicated reviewers page. Stay tuned for more!

Reviews

Michael May on vol. 3 of Anne Freaks (Robot 6)
Brenda Gregson on vol. 1 of The Battle of Genryu (Animanga Nation)
Connie on vol. 32 of Berserk (Slightly Biased Manga)
Snow Wildsmith on vol. 1 of Deka Kyoshi (Good Comics for Kids)
Tangognat on Love Hurts (Tangognat)
Tangognat on Maid Sama, V.B. Rose, and I.N.V.U. (Tangognat)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 27 of One Piece (A Case Suitable for Treatment)
Emily on Playgirl K (Emily’s Random Shoujo Manga Page)
Leroy Douresseaux on vol. 7 of Real (The Comic Book Bin)
John Zakrzewski on vol. 3 of Sayonara, Zetsubou-Sensei (Mania.com)
Lorena Nava Ruggero on vol. 4 of Yotsuba&! (i heart manga)

Posted in Mangablog | 3 Comments

Milestones, Gyakushu!, and more

I interviewed Dan Hipp, creator of Gyakushu! (which he just put online) and the upcoming Ben 10 manga for Del Rey, for this week’s Unbound column at Robot 6. Dan also talked to Johanna Draper Carlson at Comics Worth Reading, and they covered some different ground in that interviw.

Christopher Butcher continues his series on manga milestones with a look at the impact of Yoshihiro Tatsumi’s The Push Man.

Kate Dacey and Brad Rice look over this week’s new releases.

Danielle Leigh presents a handy manga glossary, with her own take on many of the terms discussed, in her latest Manga Before Flowers column at Comics Should Be Good.

Jonathan Clements has some tart comments on translation at The Schoolgirl Milky Crisis blog. It all seems to boil down to this: You get what you pay for.

Contest Corner: It’s the year of the frog at Tokyopop; enter by Friday night to win a ton of Sgt. Frog books, DVDs, and other stuff. Digital Manga is giving away a free copy of Taishi Zaou’s Electric Hands at their blog. And if you tell Kate Dacey what manga a every serious fan should read, you may win a copy of Town of Evening Calm, Country of Cherry Blossoms.

News from Japan: Your and My Secret creator Ai Morinaga is launching a new series in Bessatsu Friend magazine, and Boys Over Flowers manga-ka Yoko Kamio is starting a new series in Bessatsu Margaret.

Reviews: Kate Dacey takes a look at a webcomic that manga fans might like: Sinfest, by Tatsuya Ishida. (Link is to the review)

Connie on vol. 7 of 20th Century Boys (Slightly Biased Manga)
Zoey on Ciao Ciao Bambino (Manga Jouhou)
Julie on vol. 2 of Four-Eyed Prince (Manga Maniac Cafe)
Connie on vol. 15 of Hoshin Engi (Slightly Biased Manga)
Sam on vol. 1 of Koi Cupid (The Otaku’s Study)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 16 of Love*Com (A Case Suitable for Treatment)
Ysabet Reinhardt MacFarlane on vol. 16 of Love*Com (Manga Life)
Leroy Douresseaux on vol. 4 of Naruto (I Reads You)
Scott Campbell on vol. 4 of Negima!? neo (Active Anime)
Holly Ellingwood on Only One Wish (Active Anime)
Connie on vol. 7 of Pluto (Slightly Biased Manga)
Lori Henderson on vol. 1 of Princess Resurrection (Manga Xanadu)
Lorena Nava Ruggero on vol. 2 of Real (i heart manga)
Connie on vol. 1 of Redmoon (Slightly Biased Manga)
Walter Biggins on Town of Evening Calm, Country of Cherry Blossoms (Quiet Bubble)

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PR: Highlights from Viz's spring releases

pd8640This press release highlights a variety of new manga due out from Viz this spring, including the Stan Lee-Hiroyuki Takei collaboration Ultimo, several titles from the SigIKKI online comics site, some teen shoujo titles from the Shojo Beat imprint, and the much-awaited Library Wars. Read on for titles, dates, and descriptions, and watch this space for more!

VIZ MEDIA ANNOUNCES
EXCITING NEW MANGA RELEASES
SCHEDULED FOR THE FIRST HALF OF 2010

San Francisco, CA, JANUARY 11, 2010 – VIZ Media, LLC (VIZ Media), one of the entertainment industry’s most innovative and comprehensive publishing, animation and licensing companies, announces some of the exciting new manga set for release throughout the first half of 2010.

The new releases will be published by VIZ Media under its best-known imprints including VIZ Signature, Shojo Beat, Shonen Sunday, Shonen Jump and Shonen Jump Advanced.

February

BIOMEGA • by Tsutomu Nihei • Available February 2nd •
Rated ‘M’ for Mature Audiences • VIZ Signature Imprint
Zoichi Kanoe plunges into the depths of 9JO, a sprawling island city in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, in search of Eon Green, a girl with the power to transmute the N5S virus. The deadly contagion is spreading across the world and turns humans into disfigured zombie-like “drones.” But he’s not the only one looking for her. Agents of the Public Health Service’s Compulsory Execution Unit are also in hot pursuit with sinister designs of their own. Zoichi and his trans-human allies have no time to waste; the countdown to the apocalypse has begun!

BOKURANO: OURS• by Mohiro Kitoh • Available February 16th •
Rated ‘T+’ for Older Teens • VIZ Signature Imprint
One summer, fifteen kids innocently wander into a nearby seaside cave. There they meet a strange man who invites them to play an exciting new video game. This game, he explains, pits a lone giant robot against a horde of alien invaders. To play the game all they have to do is sign a simple contract. The game stops being fun when the kids find out the true purpose of their pact.

ULTIMO • by Hiroyuki Takei and Stan Lee • Available February 2nd •
Rated ‘T’ for Teens • SHONEN JUMP Imprint
ULTIMO represents a historic collaboration between comics legend Stan Lee, creator of many iconic series including Spider-Man, The Fantastic Four, and X-Men, and Hiroyuki Takei, the creator of the popular SHAMAN KING manga series. High above Farmless City, citizens are stunned by the sudden appearance of two floating figures. Are they human boys, monolithic robots, or something even more bizarre? As a battle ensues, destruction and devastation falls on the hapless city. One figure is Vice, and seems to be as evil as his name implies. The other is Ultimo, intent on trying to stop Vice from wreaking more havoc. But who are Vice and Ultimo really? Where did they come from? A new mystery begins with the fate of the world hanging in the balance!

March

CACTUS’S SECRET • by Nana Haruta • Available March 2nd •
Rated ‘T’ for Teens • SHOJO BEAT Imprint
Miku Yamada has a longtime crush on classmate Kyohei Fujioka. But no matter how many times she tries to show him how she feels, clueless Kyohei just doesn’t get it. Frustrated, Miku gives up on him, only to have him start calling her “Cactus” for being so prickly when he’s around. In the opening volume, Miku decides to try telling Kyohei her feelings by giving him chocolates for Valentine’s Day. But Kyohei, unaware that he’s the object of her affection, offers himself up as a practice partner for her love confession. Will Kyohei ever figure out Cactus’s secret?

ARATA: THE LEGEND • by Yuu Watase • Available March 9th •
Rated ‘T’ for Teens • SHONEN SUNDAY Imprint
In a mythical world where humans and gods coexist, a ceremony marking the new governing princess is about to occur for the first time in 60 years. Only a girl from the Hime Clan may take this position, but the lack of females born to this family means that a boy called Arata must pose for the role. Meanwhile in modern-day Japan, a boy named Arata Hinohara is starting his new life in high school. He wants to put memories of his difficult past behind him, but things aren’t going to be simple when he discovers a mysterious connection to the first Arata…

DOROHEDORO • by Q Hayashida • Available March 16th •
Rated ‘M’ for Mature Audiences • VIZ SIGNATURE Imprint
In a city so dismal it’s known only as “the Hole,” a clan of sorcerers have been plucking people off the streets to use as guinea pigs for atrocious “experiments” in the black arts. In a dark alley, Nikaido found Caiman, a man with a reptile head and a bad case of amnesia. To undo the spell, they’re hunting and killing the sorcerers in the Hole, hoping that eventually they’ll kill the right one. But when En, the head sorcerer, gets word of a lizard-man slaughtering his people, he sends a crew of “cleaners” into the Hole, igniting a war between two worlds.

RISTORANTE PARADISO• by Natsume Ono • Available March 16th •
Rated ‘T+’ for Older Teens • VIZ Signature Imprint
In exchange for Nicoletta’s playing “the daughter of an old friend,” Olga offers Nicoletta a place to live and an apprenticeship at the restaurant. Nicoletta fits in well among the unique personalities at Casetta dell’Orso. She gets along particularly well with the kindly headwaiter, Claudio, a divorced man who, after years, has still never taken off his wedding ring. As Nicoletta’s feelings for Claudio become complicated, she finds a sympathetic ear in Olga, leading the estranged pair to form a friendship neither expected. But as they grow closer, the pressure exerted by the secret they share becomes too much to bear.

April

STEPPING ON ROSES • by Rinko Ueda • Available April 6th •
Rated ‘T+’ for Older Teens • SHOJO BEAT Imprint
Poor Sumi Kitamura… Her irresponsible older brother Eisuke keeps bringing home orphans for her to take care of even though they can barely afford their own basic needs! Just when Sumi’s financial problems become dire, wealthy Soichiro Ashida enters her life with a bizarre proposition: he’ll provide her with the money she so desperately needs if she agrees to marry him. But can Sumi fool high society into thinking she’s a proper lady? Moreover, is it worth giving up everything for this sham of a marriage?

ROSARIO + VAMPIRE SEASON II • by Akihisa Ikeda • Available April 6th •
Rated ‘T+’ for Older Teens • SHONEN JUMP ADVANCED Imprint
Average human teenager Tsukune accidentally enrolls at a boarding school for monsters—no, not jocks and popular kids, but bona fide werewolves, witches and unnameables out of his wildest nightmares! On the plus side, all the girls have a monster crush on him. On the negative side, all the boys are so jealous they want to kill him! And so do the girls he spurns, because he only has eyes for one of them – the far-from-average vampire Moka.

HOUSE OF FIVE LEAVES • by Natsume Ono • Available April 20th •
Rated ‘T+’ for Older Teens • VIZ Signature Imprint
Masterless samurai Akitsu Masanosuke is a skilled and loyal swordsman, but his naïve, diffident nature has time and again caused him to be let go by the lords who have employed him. Hungry and desperate, he becomes a bodyguard for Yaichi, the charismatic leader of a gang called “Five Leaves.” Although disturbed by the gang’s sinister activities, Masa begins to suspect that Yaichi’s motivations are not what they seem. And despite his misgivings, the deeper he’s drawn into the world of the Five Leaves, the more he finds himself fascinated by these devious, mysterious outlaws.

May

FLOWER IN A STORM • by Shigeyoshi Takagi • Available May 4th •
Rated ‘T+’ for Older Teens • SHOJO BEAT Imprint
Riko Kunimi is trying to lead a normal high school life when Ran Tachibana bursts into her classroom carrying a gun and tells her that her life is now his. Ran, the richest, most powerful 17-year-old in Japan, wants her as his wife and he’s not taking no for an answer!

MAOH: JUVENILE REMIX • Original Story by Kotaro Isaka / Story & Art by Megumi Osuga • Available May 11th • Rated ‘T+’ for Older Teens • SHONEN SUNDAY Imprint
“As crazy as your ideas might be, as long as you believe in yourself and tackle the issue head-on, you can even change the world.”

Ando is a high school student who has the power to make others say out loud what he’s thinking. Inukai is the mysterious leader of a vigilante group called Grasshopper, which is at odds with the city’s redevelopment plan. In this chaotic city, these two will come together to weave a story of courage, determination and confrontation.

SATURN APARTMENTS • by Hisae Iwaoka • Available May 18th
Rated ‘T’ for Teens • VIZ SIGNATURE Imprint
Far in the future, humankind has evacuated the earth in order to preserve it. Humans now reside in a gigantic structure that forms a ring around the Earth, thirty-five kilometers up in the sky. The society of the Ring is highly stratified: the higher the floor, the greater the status. Mitsu, the lowly son of a window washer, has just graduated junior high. When his father disappears and is assumed dead, Mitsu must take on his father’s occupation. As he struggles with the transition to working life, Mitsu’s job treats him to an outsider’s view into the living-room dioramas of the Saturn Apartments.

June

AFTERSCHOOL CHARISMA • by Kumiko Suekane • Available June 15th •
Rated ‘T+’ for Older Teens • VIZ Signature Imprint
St. Kleio Academy is a very exclusive school: all of the students are clones of famous historical figures such as Beethoven, Queen Elizabeth I, Napoleon, Mozart, and Freud. All of them, that is, except for Shiro Kamiya. As Shiro struggles to adapt to this unusual campus, St. Kleio’s first graduate, the clone of John F. Kennedy, is killed. Are the clones doomed to repeat the fate of their genetic progenitors, or can they create their own destinies? And how does a normal boy like Shiro fit in?

LIBRARY WARS: LOVE & WAR • by Kiiro Yumi • Original Concept by Hiro Arikawa • Available June 1st • Rated ‘T+’ for Older Teens • SHOJO BEAT Imprint
Iku Kasahara has dreamed of joining the Library Defense Force ever since one of its soldiers stepped in to protect her favorite book from being confiscated in a bookstore when she was younger. But now that she’s finally a recruit, she’s finding her dream job to be a bit of a nightmare. Especially since her hard-hearted drill instructor seems to have it in for her!

For more information on these and other VIZ Media titles please visit our websites at: www.VIZ.com
www.Shojo Beat.com
www.ShonenSunday.com
www.ShonenJump.com
www.SigIKKI.com
www.VizSignature.com

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