Tuesday morning

ICv2 reports that graphic novel sales were up in July, going up faster than floppies for the first time since last November. They also have the July sales charts, but David Taylor has already manga-ized the numbers at Love Manga.

Love Manga also has this week’s releases, so you can do your bit to boost the August numbers. My picks: Drifting Classroom, which is sort of a psych/horror/classic, and volume 4 of Monster.

At the MangaCast, Ed devotes a Maki side dish to the Japanese josei magazine KISS and Jarred has some comments on Dark Horse’s new manwha line.

A Tokyopop editor writes that Tokyopop editors are now required to have blogs on the website, and to write 250 words a week. IMHO, editors work hard enough as it is without having to do this sort of thing, but as a reader, I will look forward to seeing what they write. If I can find it. So here’s a plea to the webmasters: Please make an “editors’ blogs” section of the site! And maybe a “commentary” section as well. I’ve been finding some really good bloggers on the website, but often they get drowned out by the “whos ur fav fruitsbasket character?” and “art theft is bad lol XDD” posts. I don’t mind those blogs, but I’m not interested in them and right now they’re getting in the way. I’d hate to see the editors’ efforts being wasted, so I hope Tokyopop finds a way to set their blogs apart.

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Tania on TokyoSpace

At Buzzscope, Tania del Rio gives her take on the new Tokyopop website. Like many of us, she was startled to click on the “manga” button and find fan art, not catalog entries. But she adjusted, and since she wrote the column, Tokyopop has also redesigned the site to make the books easier to find.

Tania puts her finger on something else that’s not quite right:

I guess the site also weirds me out a bit for the same reason MySpace does. Kids posting photos of themselves online always makes me fear for them slightly. I can’t help but feel anxious about those unsavory characters who might be prowling the web, particularly unsavory characters who also happen to like anime and fan service. But then again, that could just be me being an old worrywart.

She’s right. While Matt Nixon of Tokyopop described the site to me as a safe place where people of all ages could go to talk about manga, without some moderation there’s always the possibility of things going awry. Last week my daughter, who is 13, registered on the site so she could read the online manga. Within a few minutes, she got several requests from total strangers to “friend” her. Being a smart girl, she was bothered by this and stopped using her account. (She uses mine; nobody wants to friend me because I’m too old.)

Tania has plenty of good things to say about the site as well. She appreciates the columns, the reader-submitted manga, and the sense of community it has created among the younger fans. But, she says,

I guess I just wish that the whole fan element was kept slightly separate from the corporate side of the website. I’d like to go to the TOKYOPOP website for clear information about upcoming releases, press releases, appearances, etc. and then visit a separate area for all the fan art, blogs and message boards.

Hear, hear! Still, I agree with her here, too:

By putting their fans first, they are going to create a lasting relationship that will surely benefit the company in the end.

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Quick thoughts

Newsarama has a rather terse interview with Dave Cheung, creator of Chugworth Academy, which has been picked up as a webcomic and now a print manga by Seven Seas. According to Dave, Chugworth started as hentai but he thought the characters could do better so he “promoted” it. He notes that he keeps the rights to the characters (not a given in the mangaworld) and perhaps burns a bridge or two with this comment:

Working for TOKYOPOP is somewhat akin to working in an Indonesian Sweat Shop, or so I hear. Anyway, various people who I shall not name have approached me before, but their offers were nothing short of a joke.

On the TokyoSpace blogs, carolynwuf talks about what she likes in shounen manga, and I think it tracks pretty well what I like in shounen manga. Like fights that end quickly, leaving room for character development. Yes! That’s actually one of the things I liked about Otogi Zoshi. Carolyn also talks about series that go on too long, such as Inu Yasha.

What I like to see the most is a real effort by the mangaka to have developed a complete story outline from the start. I want to be able to read back in the story and see how hints or clues were given (dare I use the term foreshadowing?). I don’t want an epic plotline to feel like it was slapped together somewhere around chapter 50

Yes! My daughter is up to volume 18 of Inu Yasha but I haven’t gotten into it at all, mainly because I’m afraid of just what Carolyn is talking about. I’ve been noticing a lot of two- and three-volume series lately and wondering if that isn’t the best way to go.

Go!Comi’s Audry Taylor is at Comiket, and she’s blogging about it.

I went to Summer Comiket today and felt suffocated by the heat, as usual. The roasted scent of thousands of excited fans is unmistakeable. I made sure to bring water and a carry-on bag with wheels so that I wouldn’t break my back carrying around all the delicious dojinshi I bought. It gets tastier every year — mmm! Today I got to browse through Full Metal Alchemist, Gankutsuou, One Piece, BLEACH, Gundam Wing, and lots of other parodies. There was even an artist selling little pink panties with wicked little chibis on them!

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Quick reviews: Twice-told tales

Here’s my next set of brief reviews of Tokyopop’s new August series. These three stories all have something familiar about them, but all are worth a read on their own. These reviews are based on complimentary copies provided by the publisher.

Otogi Zoshi, by Narumi Seto

“If only she were a boy!” Hikaru’s father says of her in this book. “She’d be the most daring warrior this land has ever seen!” That’s the plot right there: Spunky young noble-born girl would rather learn how to wield a sword than how to be a good wife. Given that it’s treading well-worn ground, Otogo Zoshi manages to spin a fairly entertaining yarn, and the setting, Heian-era Kyoto, will be a plus for many readers. The manga is a two-volume prequel to the anime of the same name, but you don’t have to be familiar with the anime to enjoy it (I haven’t seen it). As rebellious as Hikaru is, she adores her older brother, Raikou, and the plot gets going when she follows him one night and encounters a gang of thieves. Her trusty manservant Tsuna whisks her out of danger, but Hikaru manages to get in a few licks herself. It turns out that the thieves are the only survivors of a village that Raikou put to the torch, and they are sworn to kill him in revenge. This manga has a bit more depth than I expected, showing the thieves as interestingly complex people rather than villains to be cut down. One of the pleasures of reading a period piece like this is the costumes, and Seto renders them with lavish detail, although the use of flat patterns is sometimes confusing. Another quibble: In some panels the heads are unnaturally small. The cover is lovely, with a restrained use of color, and the paper quality is good enough to sustain Seto’s fine lines and restrained use of pure black. Well worth picking up.

Portrait de Petite Cossette, story by Cossette House/Aniplex, art by Asuka Katsura

Here’s another story we’ve heard before: A young man becomes obsessed with a portrait of a young girl—a cursed portrait! Eiri Kurahashi, a student who works in an art gallery, feels a strange attraction for an antique portrait of a little girl named Cossette. Soon Cossette’s ghost appears to Eiri and asks him to help retrieve her belongings, which are causing harm to those who now possess them. Convinced that this will make her happy, Eiri starts the quest. This is the sort of story that could go on forever, but in fact it wraps up in two volumes, which makes for a nice length. The anime, which I haven’t seen, gets high ratings for its imaginative use of time shifts and dreamlike sequences. Some of this is reflected in the manga, but the drawings don’t always do it justice. The figures have a crude look, as if they were traced rather than drawn, although the artist does do a good job of layering in the gothic elements—stained-glass windows, period rooms, roses spilling over bloody bodies—that give the story atmosphere. This is a good choice for readers who like a good ghost story and who aren’t easily put off by zombie eyes and lots of blood.

Peach Girl: Sae’s story, by Miwa Ueda

This series, a sequel to the original Peach Girl and Peach Girl: Change of Heart, focuses on the bitch-a-licious Sae, telling a bit of her backstory and providing an opportunity for her to turn her trademark meanness on a nice guy and a cute puppy. It’s easy to feel sorry for her in the beginning, as she has been held back in high school while the rest of her friends are having a great time at college. But Sae isn’t going to let a little thing like not being in enrolled hold her back from partying with the big boys—and quickly getting in over her head. Meanwhile, a new character arrives: Kanji Sawatari, or, as Sae refers to him, Monkey Boy. Kanji is funny-looking but big-hearted, and he’s determined to marry Sae, whom he knew as a child. As in the original series, this book is drawn in a pleasantly, clear-lined shoujo style without too much fussiness or exaggeration, so it’s very easy to read. If you liked the original Peach Girl series, you’ll probably like Sae’s Story, but don’t shy away if you haven’t read the earlier books: This series stands pretty well on its own, and the omake chapter in the back is a quick summary of the early Peach Girl.

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Debate! Debate!

OEL, MIC, M-O-U-S-E… For those who are still wondering what to call non-Japanese manga, there’s an interesting debate going on right now at Wikipedia over whether to retitle their Amerimanga article.

For the record, I scoffed at “global manga” but I have come to see its usefulness because its so inclusive. Amerimanga is too narrow—do we have to call The Dreaming Australimanga? Of course the term “Amerimanga” refers to the venerable magazine of that name. My daughter ordered a used copy from Amazon a couple of years ago. I picked it up the other night and was impressed by the quality and the artists—Amy Ganter had a story in there. But I would suggest the Wikipedia entry should just cover the magazine and redirect to a more inclusive term for non-Japanese manga.

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Manga in the news

Last week, Time magazine discovered manga, with a business story and an interview with Natsuki Takaya. Now what? In his Flipped column, David Welsh offers some story ideas for journalists who want to get a bit of manga in their news.

Over at Love Manga, David Taylor gives the latest Bookscan top 10 along with a bit of commentary. My favorite:

Naruto should be taken out back and shot for being so successful.

Heh! David performs the essential public service of giving the top ten in numerical order, something that ICv2 seems duty-bound never to do.

The Honolulu Star-Bulletin looks at School Rumble, one of my favorite new series, with comments from the manga-ka from Kawaii-Kon.

The Baltimore Sun goes to Otakon and notices all the cosplay.

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