New titles and best-sellers

May 22nd, 2008

David Welsh looks over this week’s new manga at Precocious Curmudgeon and continues his look at Eisner nominees, including New Engineering, Tekkonkinkreet, and Town of Evening Calm, Country of Cherry Blossoms, in his latest Flipped column.

Vol. 29 of Naruto checks in at number 48 on the USA Today best-seller list, down from #44 last week. Over at Comicsnob, Matt Blind posts the online sales rankings for last week.

Here’s a hopeful sign for DramaQueen fans: The company is sending out cease and desist notices to scanlators. Kuri-ousity has the scoop, along with the latest from their forums.

Translators Alethea and Athena Nibley write about grammar and word choices, and take a stand for “you and me,” in their latest Manga Life column. Park Cooper introduces Manga Bulletin, a regular news and comment column, with PR and snark on Tite Kubo, the Honey and Clover movie, and the latest Pokemon manga.

At the Icarus blog (always NSFW), Simon Jones lists the adult manga titles from the latest Previews.

Tite Kubo is coming to SDCC, and John Jakala is rearranging his life accordingly.

Same Hat guys links to scanlations of a series that is never going to be licensed, Shintaro Kago’s Dance! Kremlin Palace! Here’s the prologue and chapter 1. (Be warned, it’s NSFW.)

Patrick Macias takes a peek at a bit of Japanese culture that hasn’t really made it over here: Ojisan “kindly old uncle” magazines, featuring hot middle-aged men and the things they love (comfy clothes and soft food, apparently).

Hellish Kitty: Here’s a tattoo that combines Hello Kitty with Akira’s Shotaro Kaneda. Click at your own risk! (I actually think it’s kind of cute.)

Reviews: Deb Aoki reviews vol. 1 of J-Pop Idol, which was the number one cell phone manga in Japan, at About.com (which has a new, cleaner design—much more readable). At Active Anime, Scott Campbell reviews vol. 12 of Trigun Maximum, and Holly Ellingwood dives into a mixed bag of Shakespeare’s Hamlet, vol. 1 of A Strange and Mystifying Story, and A Love Song for the Miserable. James Hanrahan reviews vol. 1 of Dororo and vol. 1 of Dokkoida at Manga Life. Lissa Pattillo reviews vol. 1 of Satisfaction Guaranteed at Kuri-ousity. At Comics Worth Reading, Johanna Draper Carlson adds vol. 2 of Aria to her “Recommended” list. Sabrina checks out vol. 1 of Aqua at Comics Village. Isaac Hale gives vol. 5 of Barefoot Gen an A+ at PopCultureShock’s Manga Recon blog. Connie is biased in favor of vol. 12 of Skip Beat at Slightly Biased Manga. Kethylia wasn’t crazy about the Train Man light novel but thought the translation was good. Tangognat takes a look at vols. 1-7 at Kamikaze Kaito Jeanne. Erica Friedman checks out vol. 12 of Yuri Hime at Okazu. Carlo Santos picks up vol. 17 of Negima at ANN. Matthew Brady reviews the June Shojo Beat at Warren Peace Sings the Blues.

Jojo’s bizarre misadventure

May 22nd, 2008

Guy reading a generic bookANN is reporting a bizarre little story about Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure: Publisher Shueisha and anime company A.P.P.P. have stopped shipments of the anime and manga because of an image that some Muslims found offensive. In the sixth episode of the anime, a character is apparently reading a copy of the Koran while ordering that another character be killed. In the manga version, the text in the book is unintelligible, but the producers of the anime used actual text from the Koran, which seems to have triggered the online protests. In their official statement, Shueisha and A.P.P.P. say that the anime producers didn’t realize they were using actual passages from the Koran; they just wanted something Arabic because the scene was set in Egypt. They apologized and promised to scrub the offending scenes as well as some fight scenes that included mosques. Breitbart.com has more details. The manga has been around since 1987 and the anime started up in 2001, so neither is new, but Breitbart notes that a pirated version with Arabic subtitles has been making the rounds since March 2007. I imagine the price of older Jojo items is about to skyrocket among collectors. (Image, which does not depict the Koran, lifted from ANN.)

April: The cruelest month?

May 22nd, 2008

PokemonICv2 released Diamond’s sales figures for April yesterday, as well as an analysis of sales for the first quarter of 2008. The news is mixed: sales of pamphlet comics were down 7% from the first quarter of 2007, sales of graphic novels were up 5%, and the overall market was down 5%. (Keep in mind that Diamond distributes to comics stores.) If this seems mathematically odd, remember that floppies make up the lion’s share of that market.

It was a particularly lean month for manga, however, with only 7 titles making the the top 100 selling graphic novels list. Read the rest of this entry »

Jesus, Buddha, Tite Kubo, they’re all in here somewhere

May 21st, 2008

In this week’s Manga Before Flowers column at Comic Book Resources, Danielle Leigh wonders why she doesn’t like shonen as much as she thinks she should, and she asks readers to suggest some new titles for her shoujo-loving self to try.

If Jesus and Buddha living together in modern-day Japan sounds like comedy gold, then Khursten has the manga for you: Saint Young Men. It’s unlicensed (surprise!) but she has a taste of it at MangaCast. Meanwhile, Ed continues his big list of this month’s Japanese releases with parts 2 and 3 of the mid-major publishers.

Erin Finnegan wonders if, as a professional manga writer, she can write off her manga purchases, and her commenters say yes. And at the Ninjaconsultant site she posts the second part of the shoujo manga panel from Anime Boston.

Broccoli Books has a blog that allows readers to peek into the production process. In the current post, staffer Yukiko talks about editing Nui, an upcoming title.

So, apparently all those “Kubo is coming” teasers we’ve been seeing around the blogosphere were referring to Tite Kubo, creator of Bleach, who will be a guest at this year’s San Diego Comic-Con.

At Same Hat, Ryan reflects on the life of retailer Rory Root, who was an early supporter of manga.

Huamulan03 has more on price increases in Indonesia at the Sunny Side Up Anime Blog.

News from Japan: ComiPress has the latest on manga and light novel adaptations. And Japanator’s God Len muses on why Japanese readers voted One Piece as the manga most likely to make them cry.

Reviews: Katherine Farmar reviews vol. 1 of Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Service at the Forbidden Planet blog. The locals check in at Comics Village: Charles Tan on vol. 13 of Death Note: How To Read; Dan Polley on vol. 6 of Gacha Gacha: The Next Revolution; Lori Henderson on vol. 1 of Fairy Cube; and John Thomas on Kazuo Koike’s Color of Rage. Erin Finnegan has a thoughtful review of vols. 1 and 2 of Speed Racer: Mach Go Go Go at PopCultureShock (and no, a thoughtful review of this title is not a contradiction in terms). Lots of reviewing action at Active Anime, where Sandra Scholes checks out the UK edition of vol. 1 of Nana, Scott Campbell dives into vol. 1 of Ral Grad and vol. 8 of Oh My Goddess, Holly Ellingwood reads vol. 5 of Love*Com, and Rachel Bentham gets an advance look at A Promise of Romance. At Comics Worth Reading, Johanna Draper Carlson puts vol. 8 of Nana and vol. 1 of Aria on her Recommended list and suspects from vol. 2 of Honey and Clover that that series will grow on her. Lissa Pattillo reviews Gorgeous Carat Galaxy at Kuri-ousity. Michelle enjoys vol. 27 of Basara at Soliloquy in Blue. Tiamat’s Disciple continues his look at unlicensed manga with three more series: vols. 1-3 of Koudelka, by Chikyu Misaki manga-ka Yuji Iwahara; vols. 1 and 2 of Godhand Teru; and vols. 1-24 of Glass Mask, which is one of the best-selling shoujo titles of all time. Greg Hackmann is not impressed with vol. 1 of Hotel Africa but Ron Quezon gives vol. 4 of Cipher solid Bs at Anime on DVD. Lori Henderson gives five stars to vol. 1 of Muhyo & Rohji’s Bureau of Supernatural Investigation at Manga Xanadu. Ferdinand reviews vol. 1 of B.O.D.Y. at Prospero’s Manga. Julie checks out vol. 1 of Two Flowers for the Dragon at the Manga Maniac Cafe. At Emily’s Random Shoujo Manga Page, Emily looks at two more unlicensed series, Love Fighter and Love Luck. Jog reviews Color of Rage. Deb Aoki reads vol. 1 of Ultimate Venus at About.com. Connie checks out vol. 10 of Saint Seiya, vol. 5 of Queens, and vol. 1 of X-Day at Slightly Biased Manga.

New manga, 2chan demystified, omake

May 20th, 2008

Katherine Dacey has posted another Weekly Recon, with this week’s new manga and her recommendations, at PopCultureShock.

Can’t tell 2chan from 4chan? Wired explains it all to you and talks to Patrick Macias as well about American otaku. (Via Patrick’s blog.)

Salimbol posts some Fullmetal Alchemist omake and some mangaka self-portraits.

Want to hear yet another expert explain the appeal of yaoi? Here you go. This one actually delves into the social implications of yaoi fandom, which makes it more substantial than most.

At Aint It Cool News, Scott Green posts a review of Harvey and Etsuko’s Manga Guide to Japan that also delves into some of creator Mimei Sakamoto’s more controversial comments. (Via Female Comic Book Superheroes, via When Fangirls Attack.)

Fanime is this weekend, and About.com’s Deb Aoki runs through the high points, including appearances by My Dearest Devil Princess manga-ka Maika Netsu and uber-editor Carl Horn.

Casey Brienza, a.k.a. Kethylia, will be presenting an academic paper on manga at the 6th Annual Conference on the Book in October.

News from Japan: More like rumors from Japan, really: ANN cites a Mainichi Shimbun article claiming that the publisher Shogakukan is considering shutting down Weekly Young Sunday, the magazine that was home to One Pound Gospel. The seinen magazine had a circulation of 202,541 last year, respectable by U.S. standards but not so much in Japan, where similar magazines have circs of close to 1 million. ANN also reports that Gen Urobuchi will write the light novel adaptation of the Black Lagoon manga. And Hello Kitty is Japan’s new tourism ambassador to China, joining fellow feline Doraemon in the cartoon cultural attache corps.

Reviews: Johanna Draper Carlson finds that she doesn’t like vol. 2 of Hell Girl any more than she liked vol. 1, at Comics Worth Reading. At Comics-and-More, Dave Ferraro finds vol. 1 of The Moon and Sandals to be a fun, light read that is definitely worth checking out. Erica Friedman checks out an untranslated yuri manga, vol. 3 of Aoi Hana, at Okazu. Active Anime’s reviews for the day: Scott Campbell on vol. 9 of Path of the Assassin, Margaret Veira on vol. 6 of Trinity Blood, and Holly Ellingwood on The Reformed and vol. 1 of S. Tiamat’s Disciple recently reached that moment we all dread: He ran out of manga to read in English. So he’s reviewing a slew of unlicensed titles: vols. 1-9 of History’s Strongest Disciple, vols. 1-7 of Cool Beauty Revenger Gekkoh, vols. 1-14 of Family Compo, vols. 1-2 of Arcana Soul, and vols. 1-15 of Angel Densetsu. He also picks up a licensed series, vols. 2-7 of Elemental Gelade. Lissa Pattillo reads a manga that I really enjoyed, vol. 1 of Off*Beat, at Kuri-ousity. Julie reviews vol. 1 of Dorothea at the Manga Maniac Cafe. Ferdinand finds nothing new about vol. 1 of Haruka at Prospero’s Manga. Briana Lawrence checks out vol. 1 of Don’t Blame Me and Danielle Van Gorder reviews vol. 2 of Fairy Tail at Anime on DVD. Kethylia enjoys vol. 22 of Berserk. Deb Aoki reviews vols. 1 and 2 of Aqua at About.com. Salimbol reviews vols. 6-9 of Saiyuki and vol 17 of Tsubasa at The Chocolate Mud Wyvern Presents.

Dude, where’s my manga?

May 19th, 2008

Yotsuba&!Ed Chavez updates his big list of discontinued manga at the MangaCast, and he notes some trends: manhwa and seinen titles are more likely to get the ax (or just fade away without an announcement) but on the brighter side, some dropped titles are being picked up by other publishers. Meanwhile, some guy at the ADV booth at ACEN tells Gia that yes, they are still publishing manga, and no, they don’t have a release date for vol. 6 of Yotsuba&! yet. Nonetheless, Ed puts Cromartie High School, Gunslinger Girl, and Yotsuba&! on his dead manga list.

David Welsh lists some manga collections he’d like to see at Precocious Curmudgeon; commenters chime in with more.

A helpful reader has provided an English transcript of the French interview with Suehiro Maruo posted recently at Same Hat.

Otaku USA editor Patrick Macias and contributing writer Matt Alt take a trip to the Mandarake complex in Akihabara, and they record the experience, plus some other adventures, in podcast form.

Canned Dogs has an account of Takehiko Inoue’s reasons for moving to Evening magazine and starting Vagabond after Slam Dunk ran its course.

Tiamat’s Disciple is not impressed with Viz’s UK launch, and neither are his commenters.

The Viet Nam News reports on some resistance to unflipped manga in that country.

The Count and the FairyNews from Japan: ANN reports that the Hakushaku to Yosei (The Count and the Fairy) light novels, already slated to be made into anime, will have a manga incarnation as well. The fantasy series is set in Victorian England and will run in Margaret magazine. Helen McCarthy looks at anime and manga museums in Japan at Suite 101. And here’s another destination to add to your list: Tokyo Character Street, an underground street of shops featuring anime and manga characters. (Cover image from Hakushaku to Yosei swiped from ANN.)

Reviews: Johanna Draper Carlson gives vol. 17 of Kindaichi Case Files the thumbs-up at Comics Worth Reading, and she also enjoys vol. 9 of Inubaka: Crazy for Dogs. Mangamaniac Julie checks out Renai Sousa: Love Control at the MangaCast. Katherine Dacey reviews two upcoming one-shots, Haridama: Magic Cram School and The Reformed, at Manga Recon. Connie reads Town of Evening Calm, Country of Cherry Blossoms at Slightly Biased Manga. At Active Anime, Scott Campbell reviews vol. 3 of Muhyo & Roji’s Bureau of Supernatural Investigation and vol. 21 of Berserk, and Holly Ellingwood reads Haridama: Magic Cram School and the light novel Maid Machinegun. Michelle gives an A- to vol. 17 of Tsubasa at Soliloquy in Blue. Tiamat’s Disciple takes a walk on the prose side with a look at the Rurouni Kenshin light novel Voyage to the Moon World. Carl Kimlinger reads vol. 19 of Fruits Basket, Carlo Santos pans vol. 1 of Short Sunzen, and Theron Martin reviews vols. 4 and 5 of Kashimashi ~Girl Meets Girl~ at ANN. David Welsh has a thoughtful review of Disappearance Diary at Precocious Curmudgeon. Salimbol reviews vol. 16 of Wallflower and vol. 6 of Vampire Knight. At the Dublin (California) Library, Sharibet reviews XXXHolic. Lissa Pattillo kicks off a week of mystery manga with a look at vol. 1 of Kamen Tantei at Kuri-ousity.

Confidential to QC and Cat: Hotmail is bouncing my e-mails to you for some reason. If you have another e-mail address I can use, please send it along and I’ll re-send my replies to you.

ACEN update, Spanish manga, and some literary criticism

May 18th, 2008

AnimaGia is working hard at ACEN, where despite a lack of internets (boo!) she is posting regularly. It’s mostly about anime, but she has a few scooplets: Yaoi Press announced a new Dany&Dany title, Anima, Viz and ADV were no-shows for their panels, and there’s a rumor that Iris Print has closed up shop, although it’s only a rumor—Gia has a few links. (Anima cover lifted from Dany&Dany’s website.)

One of those links is to Boys Next Door, which has been around for a while but apparently just got a shiny new blog. Take a peek!

I think I missed this when it first appeared, but PWCW’s Ed Chavez talked to Aurora Garcia and Diana Fernandez, the duo known as Kosen, about the manga industry in Spain and their new title Daemonium, which is being published by Tokyopop. (Via The Yaoi Review.) Over at the MangaCast, Ed has the unedited audio of his conversation with the duo.

Xavier Guilbert has two articles about George Akiyama’s work at du9: The first, a review of Ashura, is in English, and the second, about Zeni Gaba, is in French.

The MangaCast crew also looks at last week’s new manga, with recommendations and commentary, as always.

Some Dark Horse musings at Sporadic Sequential, where John Jakala wonders whether he should read Gantz (the readers help out in comments) and what ever happened to XS Hybrid.

Oigue Maniax discusses how the stories of manga convey complex meanings with clear storytelling.

Unnamed HejabiMuslimah Media Watch, a blog that covers the way Muslim women are viewed in popular culture, has a very interesting post on the work of Asia Alfasi, a British manga artist, and the way she and her characters are covered in the media. (Via When Fangirls Attack; image lifted from the link and presumably copyright (c) Asia Alfasi.)

At The Anime Blog, Rachel discusses whether the Japanese notice global manga—and why it doesn’t matter. Global manga creators with thin skins should avoid the comments on this post.

Anime Diet takes on the thorny question of which is better: anime or manga.

Congratulations to Erica Friedman on reaching 1,000 posts and 1,000,000 visitors at Okazu! Erica also has this week’s yuri news.

Sonia Leong writes about Manga Life, her how-to manga series, on her LJ.

Life Imitates Manga: Dan Pink notices a new product that is very like one mentioned in his manga, The Adventures of Johnny Bunko: The Last Career Guide You’ll Ever Need.

Reviews: Johanna finds much to criticize about The Reformed and Ed Sizemore compares two Mother Teresa manga at Comics Worth Reading. Erica Friedman deconstructs vol. 4 of Eternal Alice Rondo at Okazu. At Active Anime, Scott Campbell reviews vol. 7 of Suzuka and vol. 3 of Galaxy Angel II, Davey C. Jones reads vol. 14 of YuYu Hakusho, and Holly Ellingwood checks out vol. 3 of Kedamono Damono, vol. 1 of Red Angel, vol. 1 of Dragon Sister, and Red. Lissa Pattillo reads vol. 7 of +Anima at Kuri-ousity. Snow Wildsmith checks out Star at Manga Jouhou. Darren Pangan reviews Mx0, which I don’t believe is licensed in English, at Anime2Manga. Michelle enjoys vols. 9 and 10 of Boys Over Flowers at Soliloquy in Blue. Julie takes a look at vol. 7 of After School Nightmare, vol. 13 of Kekkaishi, and vol. 1 of Kiss All the Boys at the Manga Maniac Cafe. At Manga Xanadu, Lori Henderson has mini-reviews of several different volumes and her daughter Jenny gives her take on vol. 6 of Dragon Drive. The Anime on DVD reviewers take a look at Viz’s UK titles, while Sakura Eries reads vol. 6 of School Rumble and Julie Rosato checks out Love Control. At PopCultureShock’s Manga Recon blog, Ken Haley reviews vol. 1 of Hellgate: London, Phil Guie checks out vols. 1 and 2 of Junk: Record of the Last Hero, and Katherine Dacey reads Voiceful. Tiamat’s Disciple finds that vols. 1-3 of Suki are that rare CLAMP manga that he doesn’t like. Huamulan03 links to a series of reviews at the Sunny Side Up Anime Blog. Ferdinand finds vol. 1 of Pokemon: Diamond and Pearl Adventure to be pretty good despite being a kids’ comic written to a formula. Connie reviews vol. 1 of Dororo, vol. 2 of Battle Royale (ultimate edition), and vol. 19 of Eyeshield 21 at Slightly Biased Manga. Ed Chavez has an audio review of two from Tezuka, vol. 1 of Dororo and Apollo’s Song at the MangaCast. Thomas Pfeiffer turns the manga spotlight on xxxHolic at About Heroes. Oyceter explains why vol. 5 of Wild Adapter is her favorite volume so far. The Animanachronism looks at SelfMadeHero’s manga Hamlet, among other adaptations. Prizm looks at vol. 1 of Blood+ at The Star of Malaysia.

Stan speaks! Plus, translation tips!

May 15th, 2008

Patrick Macias interviews Stan Lee for The Japan Times about his foray into manga at the age of 85.

Vol. 29 of Naruto rises from number 57 to 44 on this week’s USA Today best-seller list.

The UK’s 2007 Eagle Awards have been announced, and Death Note was voted Favourite Manga. (Via ComiPress.)

Thinking about becoming a translator? Fruits Basket translators Alethea and Athena Nibley explain how to break into the biz at Manga Life.

Same Hat posts a video of a French interview with Suehiro Maruo. Yes, it’s in French, but there are glimpses of his studio and other interesting items.

Tangognat looks at the evolution of Boys Over Flowers.

The Sunny Side Up Anime Blog reports that manga prices are going up in Indonesia, but at aot $1.49 a volume, it’s still way cheaper than in the U.S.

News from Japan: ANN reports that Crimson Hero and Chocolate Underground are both ending their runs in Bessatsu Margaret. ComiPress has word of several new manga adaptations of light novels.

Reviews: Katherine Dacey hands a severe drubbing to vol. 1 of Color of Rage, on the grounds of anachronism not just in the details but in the overall concept. Lori Henderson enjoys vol. 3 of Phantom at Manga Xanadu. At Anime on DVD, Briana Lawrence reads Sugar Milk and Patricia Beard reviews vol. 7 of ES: Eternal Sabbath. Mely has eight things to say about vol. 17 of Tsubasa at coffeeandink; there may be some spoilers here for other CLAMP series as well. Tiamat’s Disciple takes a look at vol. 1 of Iono-sama Fanatics, vols. 1-3 of Sword of the Dark Ones, and vol. 1 of Rose Hip Rose. Lissa Pattillo checks out vol. 6 of Welcome to the NHK at Kuri-ousity. Julie is on the mend and ready to review vol. 7 of D. Gray-Man at the Manga Maniac Cafe. Ferdinand finds vol. 3 of Winter Demon pretty good, for a porn series, at Prospero’s Manga. Connie reads vol. 11 of The Law of Ueki at Slightly Biased Manga. New reviews up at Manga Life: Ysabet Reinhardt MacFarlane on vol. 11 of Tail of the Moon and vol. 2 of Honey and Clover, Barb Lien-Cooper on The Complete Guide to Manga, and David Rasmussen on vol. 1 of The World of Narue.

PR: Most Excellent Superbat

May 14th, 2008

Japanese culture: It’s everywhere. Even in your superhero comics:

This is from the sketchbooks for DC’s Final Crisis, which is some really big superhero comics event that launches this month. Opinions, anyone?

Germs and gaffes

May 14th, 2008

Moyashimon 5It seems to be awards season in Japan; the latest are the 32nd annual Kodansha Manga Awards, which were announced yesterday. Shugo Chara! got the nod for best children’s manga; none of the others are licensed yet, but they are: Saikyō! Toritsu Aoizaka Kōkō Yakyūbu (Best Shonen Manga), Kimi ni Todoke (Best Shojo Manga), and Moyashimon (Best General Manga). Moyashimon is also known as Tales of Agriculture, and here is Wikipedia’s summary:

The series follows Tadayasu Sawaki, a first-year college student at an agricultural university, who has a unique ability to see and communicate with bacteria and other micro-organisms.

Yes, please! Del Rey, phone home. Ed has more comments at the MangaCast. (The image is, I believe, the cover of vol. 5 of Moyashimon, gently lifted from the Kodansha website.)

Here’s a find: Erica Friedman recommends Manga Gunkan, the blog of translator Anastasia Moreno, which is written in English and Japanese. Well worth a click!

Gia is going to Anime Central this week, and she’s taking questions for the panels—which will include one by the elusive ADV.

This blog post is titled “My issues with manga,” but it’s really more about issues with fandom and popular attitudes toward manga than manga itself. I look forward to part 2. (Via When Fangirls Attack.)

Tokyopop’s new direction: In his latest Flipped column, David Welsh talks to Tokyopop’s Bryce Coleman about their new line of color graphic novels from around the world.

News from Japan: ANN has the dope on three new manga serials launching in Kodansha’s Weekly Shonen Magazine, by the creators of Inugami, Suzuka, and Samurai Deeper Kyo. And sports manga creator Tetsuya Chiba has a one-shot scheduled to run in Big Comic this month.

Not manga, but a good read: Ten mistakes you probably will make in Japan. (Via Japanator.)

Reviews: Let’s start right up with Carlo Santos’ latest Right Turn Only!! column at ANN, where he gives the pros and cons on Dororo, Gun Blaze West, Kannazuki no Miko, and lotsa other stuff. And there are some new reviews up at Manga Village: Charles Tan on vol. 1 of Gyo, Dan Polle on vol. 1 of Toto! The Wonderful Adventure, Sabrina on vol. 1 of Black Cat, and Lori Henderson on vol. 3 of Muhyo & Roji’s Bureau of Supernatural Investigation. At the Manga Maniac Cafe, Julie is under the weather but still manages to pen several micro reviews. Lissa Pattillo reads vol. 5 of Black Sun, Silver Moon at Kuri-ousity. Holly Ellingwood reviews vol. 2 of Short Sunzen and vol. 15 of Sgt. Frog, and Scott Campbell checks out vol. 1 of Rose Hip Rose and vol. 13 of Kekkaishi at Active Anime. Erica Friedman takes a look at vol. 2 of Strawberry Panic at Okazu. Ferdinand has an update on vol. 4 of Kashimashi at Prospero’s Manga. Connie takes a look at vol. 1 of Fairy Tail at Slightly Biased Manga. Eva reviews vols. 1 and 2 of The Guin Saga (light novels) at MangaCast.