SDCC: PWCW roundup, Ed gets cover art

Kai-Ming Cha of Publisher’s Weekly Comics Week has a nice roundup of the manga news. This struck me as interesting:

Yen Press announced plans to simultaneously publish its books in the U.S. and the U.K. “Imports from the North American market has kept the U.K. manga market from growing,” said Yen Press co-publishing director, Kurt Hassler. “To prevent this, we’re going to move our print runs straight to the ground in the UK. We want to give them an opportunity to get behind manga.”

If current trends hold true, pretty soon everything is going to be published everywhere simultaneously. In omnibus editions.

Meanwhile, Ed Chavez has more info on the Seven Seas panel and CMX’s license of Crayon Shin-chan.

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SDCC: ADV, Del Rey, more Viz

OK, the blog posts are starting to roll in.

ADV: Giapet made it to their panel, and they actually talked about manga. They will be putting out an omnibus edition of Azumanga Daioh (omnibuses do seem to be the trend this year, don’t they?) and will be announcing some new licenses soon.

Del Rey: They’re publishing a Japanese manga biography of legendary bluesman Robert Johnson, a manga adaptation of Dark Wraith of Shannara, and a global manga by Nina Matsumoto, a.k.a. spacecoyote, the creator of that manga Simpsons drawing that was making the rounds a while ago. Other new titles: Fairy Tail, Hell Girl, Phoenix Wright (an adaptation of the Nintendo DS game), plus some light novels and a Genshiken fan book. ANN and Giapet were there. And oh, look! Del Rey has already posted their press release with more info about everything. UPDATE: And cover art, too!

Viz: ANN was at the Shojo Beat panel and reports that Viz has licensed several more manga by Arina Tanemura: Ion, Time Stranger Kyoko, and Kanshaku Dama no Yuuutsu, a short story anthology. Tanemura, who is their special guest at SDCC, is the creator of Full Moon, The Gentlemen’s Alliance +, and Kamikaze Kaitou Jeanne. They also announced another new title, B.O.D.Y. by Ao Mimori.

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PR: CLAMP signs with Dark Horse

Below the cut, a press release from Dark Horse giving more details about the new manga that CLAMP will be creating for them. It’s an interesting new format: The manga will be released in monthly 80-page digests that will then be collected into tankoubon. And it will appear simultaneously in Japan, Korea, and the U.S. They have even coined a new word for the manga digests: “mangette.” Let’s see if that one sticks.

Dark Horse joins with world-renowned creators CLAMP to welcome fans into a new era of manga

Last year Dark Horse celebrated its twentieth anniversary of publishing original graphic works by some of the world’s greatest creators. Next year, Dark Horse celebrates their twentieth anniversary of publishing manga in English. This year, at San Diego Comic-Con Dark Horse is proud to announce that these two commitments held for so long have come together. Dark Horse will have the honor of publishing a new original manga created by Satsuki Igarashi, Mokona, Tsubaki Nekoi and Ageha Ohkawa.—the manga-ka all-female supergroup known to their millions of fans worldwide as CLAMP. These four brilliant writers and artists work together to produce award-winning, best-selling manga, including RG VEDA, X, Chobits, Tsubasa, and xxxHOLiC.

CLAMP’s original manga with Dark Horse will be launched simultaneously in the United States, Japan, and Korea. The story will come out in a small digest consisting of about eighty pages each, which will then be collected into trade paperbacks with bonus material. CLAMP and Dark Horse are coining the bilingual term Mangettes to describe this innovative new format for manga distribution. This digest format, or Mangette, signifies CLAMP’s personal wish to reach their large international readership by now speaking to them directly as artists through Dark Horse, and on a basis of equality with their Japanese fans.

CLAMP and Dark Horse chose the term Mangettes to describe this revolutionary format, whose Japanese pronunciation, mangetsu, means “the full moon.” The two kanji in mangetsu also have the individual meanings of “fulfilled” and “monthly,” reflecting what will be a monthly appearance of each CLAMP Mangette.

According to CLAMP, “Mangettes are a completely brand new experience for us, too, and we’re really happy to be working on this. And we’re really looking forward to the day when we can bring you this new story from CLAMP, and the day when we can meet our fans face-to-face to hear what you think about Mangettes!”

“Dark Horse has made original comics for over twenty years; our editors have seen the hard work of individual Japanese creators in every manga we’ve ever brought over. Now we’re going to work just as hard to meet the trust CLAMP has placed in Dark Horse to publish their original work,” explains Mike Richardson, president and founder of Dark Horse. “Thanks to CLAMP, Dark Horse is today a manga publisher in a complete sense. After two decades of experience in adapting licensed editions of manga released previously by Japanese publishers, we will now become the original publisher of CLAMP, creators at the top of the manga world.”

Soon to come, details on CLAMP’s exciting new story.

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SDCC update

Here’s the latest from the intrepid bloggers who are covering SDCC. As always, ComiPress is eating my lunch on this, so if you want more, check out their exhaustive list.

Of course, Reuters has the obligatory what-is-this-thing article for general readers.

Broccoli: At MangaCast, Ed Chavez reports that they mostly discussed previously announced titles but did drop one new one: Nui. Giapet has a little more info on that series:

But the series is about a girl who likes plushies more than boys. And she likes them so much that some of her stuffed animals start turning INTO boys. And so suddenly she’s living with three bishounen. Oookay.

CMX: ANN is reporting that they have licensed Crayon Shin-Chan.

Dark Horse: Publisher’s Weekly reports that DH has inked a deal with CLAMP to produce an original manga to be released simultaneously in Japan, Korea, and the U.S. in 2009. Nice!

Seven Seas: Giapet brings good news: They’re dropping their price from $10.99 to $9.99 a volume, and they will be releasing omnibus volumes of their global titles, starting with Destiny’s Hand.

Tokyopop: IGN has a nice writeup of their panel, including new titles.

Viz: At MangaCast, Ed thinks Slam Dunk is, well, a slam dunk and he’s OK with Bleach being serialized in Shonen Jump. John Jakala is pleased as well.

Yen Press: Giapet had to leave early but reports on a few titles, including the mature Sundome, and mentions that Kurt Hassler said there would be no censoring. ANN has more details.

Also, at Okazu, Erica Friedman rounds up the new yuri announcements.

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SDCC: Just the titles, ma'am

I’ll link to panels in a minute, but I thought I would put up a post of just the new title announcements for those who only care about that. I’ll hide this list behind a cut and add to it as news rolls in, to keep everything in a single place.

Broccoli
Nui
(Source: MangaCast)

CMX
Zombie Fairy
(Source: MangaCast)
A Girl Who Runs Through Time, by Gaku Tsugano
Teru Teru × Shōnen, by Shigero Takao
The Flat Earth Exchange, by Toshimo Nigoshi
(Source: ANN)

Dark Horse
Apparently as-yet-unnamed manga by CLAMP

Del Rey
Fairy Tail, by Hiro Mashima
Hell Girl, by Miyuki Ito
Me and the Devil Blues, by Akira Hiromoto
Yokaiden, by Nina Matsumoto
Genshiken fan book
Light novels:
Dark Wars: Meiji Dracula
Psycho Busters: The Novel

Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney video game manga
(Source: Del Rey’s press release on Active Anime)

Seven Seas
Hayate X Blade, by Shizuru Hayashiya
Akatsukiiro no Seifuku Majou (”The Girl in the Dawn-Colored Uniform”), by Mera Hakamada
Girls Life (light novel)
Girls Revolution (light novel)
(Source: a geek by any other name)

Tokyopop
Monochrome Factor
VB Rose
Haruzake Bitter Bop
Shin Megami Tensei
.hack//GU+
.hack//XXXX
The Third
Boku to Kanojo no XXX,
by Ai Morinaga (picked up from ADV)
Mamotte Shogugetten
Kanuzuki no Miko
Selena’s Comic School
(how-to book)
White Night Melody
Rolling
Vassalord
Legends of the Dark Crystal
(based on the Jim Henson film)
Princess Chaos
Dark Metro
Devil’s Bride
J-Idol Audition
The End
Evergrey

Manhwa by Park Hee-Jung:
Fever
Hotel Africa
Martin & John
Too Long

(Source: IGN)

Viz
Slam Dunk
(Source: MangaCast)
B.O.D.Y., by Ao Mimori
Three by Arina Tanemura:
Ion
Time Stranger Kyoko
Kanshaku Dama no Yuuutsu
(short story anthology, to be retitled Short-tempered Melancholy)
(Source: ANN)

Yen Press
Sundome, by Kazuto Okada.
Kaze no Hana
Kieli
(Source: a geek by any other name)

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Eisners leave manga on the shelf

Manga and global manga creators did well in the Eisner nominations, but when it came to the actual awards, it was pretty scarce. The only manga title to win in its category was Old Boy, and that had to be a manga because the category was “Best U.S. Edition of International Material – Japan.”

Not that the winners weren’t deserving—I’m sure they were. I read Fun Home, American Born Chinese, and Gray Horses, and they were all great. But it would be nice to see manga do better, because there were some really strong books in there.

As a reminder of what could have been, here is a list of the manga that were nominated and the actual winners.

Best Continuing Series
Nominated: Naoki Urasawa’s Monster
Winner: All Star Superman

Best New Series
Nominated: East Coast Rising, by Becky Cloonan
Winner: Criminal, by Ed Brubaker

Best Anthology
Nominated: Japan as Viewed by 17 Creators
Winner: Fables: 1001 Nights of Snowfall

Best Archival Project/Collection—Comic Books
Nominated: Abandon the Old in Tokyo; Ode to Kirihito
Winner: Absolute Sandman, vol. 1

Best U.S. Edition of International Material—Japan
Nominated: After School Nightmare, Antique Bakery, Naoki Urasawa’s Monster, by Naoki Urasawa, Walking Man
Winner: Old Boy

Special Recognition
Nominated: Ross Campbell, Abandoned, Wet Moon 2; Svetlana Chmakova, Dramacon
Winner: Hope Larson, Gray Horses

UPDATE: Ed comments at MangaCast.

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