Quick links, short reviews

The MangaCast gang goes through this week’s new releases.

East Coast Rising creator Becky Cloonan discusses the cover design of volume 2.

Japanator translates a Super Mario comic from the olden days. (Via Journalista.)

At the Icarus blog (NSFW and proud of it!), Simon Jones comments on recent obscenity arrests in Japan and presents a sampling of his newest wares.

ComiPress has the scoop on the latest from EigoManga, a full-color comedy manhwa called Palbot.

Translator Tomo Kimura notes a brief hiatus in the Japanese serialization of Nana; according to the magazine Cookie, creator Ai Yazawa has fallen ill.

Bloomberg News looks into Tokyopop/Kaplan’s SAT prep manga.

Reviews: Plenty of brief reviews up today. Chris Mautner rounds up some recent manga at Panels and Pixels, Dan Grendell has a Manga Zubon column up at Comic Pants, and the Anime on DVD reviewers post more Small Bodied Manga Reviews. Also at AoD: Ben Leary checks out vol. 1 of Gon. At Active Anime, Holly Ellingwood reviews vol. 17 of Blade of the Immortal. Matt Brady reviews vol. 1 of Eden: It’s an Endless World at Warren Peace Sings the Blues. At Hobotaku, Leah sings the praises of The Push Man. Julie reviews vol. 5 of Beauty Pop at the Manga Maniac Cafe. At Manganews, Anne reviews the one-shot Affair.

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New comics and job openings

Is it Wednesday already? David Welsh peruses this week’s comics list.

At PWCW, Kai-Ming Cha has the scoop on Viz’s deluxe re-release of Tekkonkinkreet.

ComiPress has a serialization update from Japan and links to an article about doujinshi and freedom of speech at Hesei Democracy.

Are manga just like indy comics only with happy endings? The crowd at the Bendis Board chews on that one for a while. (Via the Newsarama blog, where a commenter turns indy cliches into a drinking game.)

Manga Life is looking for reviewers. No pay, but you may get comp copies. And ComiPress is looking for proofreaders.

Reviews: At Prospero’s Manga, Ferdinand turns thumbs down on vol. 1 of The Devil Within but Miranda likes vol. 1 of Poison Candy. Kiara reviews vol. 3 of Eternal Alice Rondo at Manganews. Michael Aronson checks out vol. 2 of Gin Tama at Manga Life. Nick looks at vol. 1 of Loveless at Hobotaku. At the Manga Maniac Cafe, Julie takes an early look at vol. 7 of Yakitate!! Japan. Erica Friedman reviews vol. 1 of Tetragrammaton Labyrinth at Okazu. At Anime on DVD, Greg Hackman reviews vol. 1 of Kurohime. Over at Active Anime, Scott Campbell reviews vol. 1 of Pumpkin Scissors, Sandra Scholes looks at vol. 2 of Roureville, Holly Ellingwood reads vol. 12 of Battle Vixens, and Davey C. Jones checks out vol. 3 of Gacha Gacha: The Next Revolution.

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Tuesday early links

Warning: The invasion is about to begin—the Naruto invasion, that is. In addition to swamping bookstore shelves with three new volumes a month, Viz is raffling off a trip to SDCC and a bunch of Naruto games and DVDs every week for the duration.

Speaking of Viz, they sent me a newsletter yesterday with an ad for Pretty Face that carried the tag line: “He wanted to be her boyfriend… He’ll settle for being her twin sister!” “That,” I observed to my daughter, “sums up most of shoujo manga in two sentences.” I exaggerate, of course. For a look at shounen cliches, check out this thread at Comic Book Resources.

David Welsh devotes this week’s Flipped column to two manga magazines, Shojo Beat and Otaku USA.

Life imitates manga, part infinity: ANN reports that the game Ramen Tenshi Pretty Manma, which up till now existed only as an element in the manga Genshiken, is getting its own manga.

Jason Yadao writes about Tokyopop TV at the Honolulu Star-Bulletin.

Over in Japan, Suzuka is ending and a new Fate/Stay Night manga is starting up.

German translator Jens Altmann goes shopping for some older manga and finds it in his comics store, not the chain bookstores. Sounds like they have a different distribution system over there, as the comics store can get back issues overnight.

ComiPress is looking for a proofreader.

At TheOtaku.com, Gia gently mocks Variety for referring to anime as “manga.” But here’s the thing: They’re writing about Manga Entertainment, an anime company that owns the rights to the URL Manga.com, which is a purely anime site. So it’s hardly Variety‘s fault. It does seem kind of stupid, though.

The Japanese government concludes that 5,400 people are living in manga cafes.

Reviews: Here’s a new review site to check out: Swanjun reviews both books and manga at Soliloquy in Blue; today she gives a solid B to vol. 5 of Whistle. At Anime on DVD, Sakura Eries reviews Dream Shoppe and Matthew Alexander takes a walk on the global side with a look at vol. 1 of Aoi House in Love. (For a while, one of the top search strings bringing people here was “Aoi House scanlations,” which was doubly redundant because Aoi House is a webcomic as well as being in English.) It’s Manga Monday at Comics-and-More, where Dave Ferraro reviews several titles, including the first two chapters of Honey and Clover. Julie reads all of the September Shojo Beat at the Manga Maniac Cafe. David Welsh has some thoughts on vol. 14 of Fullmetal Alchemist (with spoilers) at Precocious Curmudgeon. EvilOmar posts reviews of the Full Metal Panic! novel, vol. 1 of Peace Maker, and vol. 1 of Alive! at About Heroes. At Manga Life, Michael Aronson reviews vol. 1 of Oninbo and the Bugs from Hell, by Hideshi Hino. Snowcleo reviews vol. 1 of Avalon High Coronation at Manganews. Monday was apparently Alliteration Day at Comics Waiting Room, where Mark Mason reviews vols. 1-3 of Gacha Gacha: The Next Revolution, vol. 2 of Puri Puri, and vols. 5-9 of Guru Guru Pon-Chan. Johanna Draper Carlson reviews vol. 3 of Inu Baka: Crazy for Dogs at Comics Worth Reading. Leroy Douresseaux checks out vol. 1 of Undertown at the Comic Book Bin.

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New manga and a slew of reviews

Manga Recon gets the week off to a good start with Weekly Recon, their list of this week’s new manga plus a handful of short reviews, and TheOtaku posts their list as well. If you’re looking further into the future, Ed takes a look at the latest issue of Diamond Previews.

Two must-reads in the same place: Same Hat! Same Hat!! posts a recap (with pictures!) of the Tezuka panel at San Francisco’s Asian Arts Museum. And then they post a scanlation of yet another seriously surrealistic short comic by Shintaro Kago.

At Okazu, Erica Friedman posts a two-part sneak preview of Yuri Monogatari 5.

The Star of Malaysia has an interesting article about the manga based on the Heian-era novel The Tale of Genji.

Going to Anime Vegas? Yaoi Press will be there, representing themselves and Netcomics.

Reviews: Khursten reviews Ode to Kirihito at Otaku Champloo. At Anime on DVD, Matthew Alexander checks out the adult manga Spirit of Capitalism. Michael Aronson reviews vol. 2 of To Terra, vol. 2 of Togari, and vol. 1 of Kurohime at Manga Life. At the MangaCast, Mangamaniac Julie looks at vol. 5 of Chibi Vampire, and back at the Manga Maniac Cafe, she checks out vol. 8 of Moon Child, vol. 2 of Togari, and vol. 9 of Claymore. At PopCultureShock’s Manga Recon blog, Erin F posts a flurry of brief reviews. The Star of Malaysia checks out vol. 1 of Go Go Heaven!! Leroy Douresseaux looks at vol. 1 of We Shadows at The Comic Book Bin. Michael Aronson reads vol. 1 of Kurohime, vol. 2 of Togari, and vol. 2 of To Terra at Manga Life. At Prospero’s Manga, Ferdinand takes a look at vol. 1 of Shiki Tsukai and posts an update on vols. 2 and 3 of Kashimashi. Connie checks out vol. 3 of Kashmashi and vol. 9 of Astro Boy at Slightly Biased Manga. Nick enjoys vol. 1 of Hollow Fields at Hobotaku. At Active Anime, Holly Ellingwood reviews Stolen Heart and vol. 4 of Princess Princess. At Manganews, Ishaan checks out vol. 2 of Junk and Kurishojo reads vol. 1 of Can’t Win With You. And at One Potato Two, Satsuma enjoys another Kindaichi light novel, The Cyberlodge Murders (available only in Japanese).

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Summer reading

For some reason, the internets always seem to serve up lots of good reading on a Friday. Today is no exception.

Top of the list: At Okazu, Erica Friedman discusses her hate mail and then writes a thoughtful essay on what is and isn’t yuri.

Shaenon Garrity’s last few Overlooked Manga Festivals have been about manga that wasn’t very overlooked, but this week she’s back to form with a post about Katsuhiro Otomo’s Domu: The Dreams of Children. By freakish coincidence, I picked up the Japanese edition of this in a secondhand store in Burlington, Vermont, two weeks ago; now I know what it’s about. Thanks, Shaenon!

Fools Gold creator Amy Hadley talks about her new series, Madame Xanadu, at Newsarama. Interestingly, although her art definitely has a manga feel to it, this comic will be published under DC’s Vertigo imprint, not a traditional manga line. And it will be in color. (Via Andre.)

At his blog, The Visual Linguist, Neil Cohn analyzes Mark Crilley’s comment about manga being the comics of a new generation. (Via Journalista.)

News has been making the rounds about a Japanese doujinshi artist who was arrested for publishing obscene material. Naturally, our go-to guy on this subject is Simon (NSFW) Jones, who has an analysis and links roundup at his Icarus blog.

Becky Cloonan was a finalist for the Japan Foreign Ministry’s International Manga Award, and she’s showing off her certificate.

Sweatdroppers Sonia Leong and Emma Vieceli lure teenagers into a UK library.

The publisher Tynsdale House is planning on releasing some Bible-themed manga. I took a look at their previews a while ago and they looked pretty good, although their Flash-heavy website makes it anything but easy to find them. I think the Bible actually lends itself pretty well to the manga style; it’s original stories like Serenity that give Christian manga a bad name.

At the Vertical blog, new blogger Kerim scratches his head over the latest otaku style—bandage chic—and then is informed in comments that it is already passe.

If you’re in LA this week, check out the Little Tokyo Anime Fest: Broccoli will be there!

Reviews: At the Manga Maniac Cafe, Julie reviews vol. 6 of Yakitate! Japan. Miranda reviews vol. 1 of Tetragrammaton Labyrinth at Prospero’s Manga, and Matthew Alexander reviews it as well at Anime on DVD. Sakura Kiss checks out Spicy Hot Life at The Yaoi Review. About Heroes posts short reviews of a handful of manga. At PopCultureShock’s Manga Recon blog, Katherine Dacey-Tsuei reviews vols. 1-4 of La Corda d’Oro. At One Potato Two, translator Satsuma reads the first Kindaichi light novel (in Japanese) just for fun. Michael Aronson thumbs through The Art of Yasushi Suzuki at Manga Life. Holly Ellingwood reviews vol. 8 of Kamui at Active Anime.

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Review: Time Guardian, vols. 1-2

Time Guardian, vols. 1 and 2
Written by Daimuro Kishi
Art by Tamao Ichinose
Rated E, for Everyone
CMX, $9.99

Time Guardian is easy to slip into and easy to read. The characters are likeable, the stories have just enough imagination to keep me turning the pages, and at two volumes, it doesn’t even demand much of a commitment. I just wish that the creators and the publisher had tried a little harder on a few things.

The setting is a pawnshop that lends time, which is something that people never seem to have enough of. Our heroine is standard-issue shoujo girl Miu Asahina, who, true to stereotype, is always late for everything. By chance, she stumbles into just the right combination of actions to open the secret gate to Time Alley, home of the Kusaka Time Shop. The shop is presided over by cute guy Tokiya Kusaka, who would look about 14 if it weren’t for his bow tie and monocle, and a smart-alecky frog. Kusaka lends time to his customers in a variety of ways, taking their memories as collateral.

In the usual way these things happen, it turns out that Miu is a Very Special Person: She’s Time’s Go-Between, and her job is to follow the customers around and make sure that all goes well with their borrowed time. So now we have our framing tale, and the various customers that come in provide a series of little stories about the uses of borrowed time. Each one has pretty standard characters but enough of a twist to keep it from being totally predictable. Still, this is not “The Monkey’s Paw,” where changing the rules has dire consequences, or “Pet Shop of Horrors,” in which a person’s desires reveals their fatal flaw. This is a light, shoujo manga where every story has a happy ending. It’s a fine read, but I can’t help thinking that the creators had a great idea that they could have pushed a lot farther.

Then, in the second half of the second volume, the story shifts into a fantasy tale. Kusaka closes up the store and heads off to his native land, where people get off on watching other people’s memories and use time as a means of wielding power over others. It’s entertaining enough, but the shift is a bit disconcerting, and there are a couple of violent deaths that don’t fit at all into the otherwise light tone of the story. It’s as if the manga-kas were told their story was cancelled and given two chapters to wrap the whole thing up.

The art is quite attractive, and the action is always easy to follow. The character designs are standard-issue shoujo style, but the detail in the watches and backgrounds puts this book a notch above most shoujo manga. Maybe I noticed it more because this is a book about time, but the creators seemed to play with the pacing a lot. Sometimes the action moves very quickly, and there’s a lot of slapstick inside the store. Other times, a large, wordless panel seems to make time stop for a moment. Often this signals a flashback or the beginning of distorted time in the story.

While Time Guardian is an easy summer read, I am a bit disappointed that the creators didn’t try a little bit harder to come up with clever stories. The premise certainly lends itself to mind-bending plot developments, but the stories stay in the realm of soap opera. There was also a problem with the print quality in these books—a number of panels in volume 1 were blurred, as if they had been double-printed. Aside from that, the production is pretty good, with attractive covers and extras in the front and back.

Time Guardian won’t blow your mind, but it is a nice, quick, easy read for these last dog days of summer. With its E rating and straightforward storytelling, it would be a particularly good choice for younger children (although some youngsters might be upset by elements in the ending story).

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

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