Extended Mag: Getting into Reading Manga Magazines! 🗞

Grand Jump 2024 Issue No. 1

New issue!! First time with a lot of manga in the magazine I’m reading (7 total right now), so it was very exciting! As you can see on the cover, we have a new publication (Which I believe is a sequel/connected story to むかし話), and a oneshot by the Black Tiger mangaka, a western that was popular in Grand Jump a while ago.


みらい話 is a dense story about globjal warming and the future of humanity. I liked it, but it was mostly people talking about the problem and flashbacks before humanity got on the spaceship and it was like reading a JLPT reading question. Dense as hell but interesting! If people want to read you can read it here!

For the one shot, it was… eehhh. It felt verrrryyyyyy dated and about a subject I don’t care about (G.I. Joes). It aparently got second place in their contest, which is fucking flabergasting to me cause I didn’t like it at all. Hope 1st place is better, I think we can read it next week!

Other than that, business as usual! Slight spoilers below, but you should be fine!

No Zachisu this week sadly, but the art is so good and the mangaka is so old I know that won’t be an every issue thing. Karakida was solid and was an excellent slow burn as usual, with a great character moment to show how estranged a character is from his sister.

Wear the Sky! has a pretty Cherry Blossom chapter!

Nice happy conclusion to an arc for Diet Time:

Introduction of new characters and the next scheme for Red Mudan. Also, I finally combined my Japanese and Chinese knowledge to realize in real time that the protagonist of this story is actually Wu Zeitan (Thanks Civilization V!)

And finally…

The best girl from Can We Live Together has a whole chapter/mini arc to herself!! AHHHHH!!! I’m so happy! Also I’m going to use that final picture all the time now.

Thats the first issue for this month! The next chapter will be in two weeks!

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Also, I figured out that 瞬きのソーニャ is not really being published in this magazine? Its on semi-permanent hiatus, and the only reason it hasn’t been fully canceled is that the mangaka is the same mangaka as Amai Seitkatsu, which has been running in Grand Jump and is a legacy title from the Business Jump days. Only 3 volumes in 11 years, yeah it doesn’t really quality as a series. With that in mind, I’m taking it off my priority list and downgrading it to an optional one. If anyone wants to take a look at it in my steady, go nuts!

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#DRCL Midnight Children by 坂本眞一

Read the first chapter here!

Genres: Horror, Drama, Gothic Horror, Historical, Body Horror, LGBT, Psychological Horror, Arthouse, and also Horror

Triggers: Graphic Violence/Blood, Body Horror, Nudity, Era-Accurate Bigotry

Background on the artist:

Shin-ichi Sakamoto is a mangaka’s mangaka. He is not famous among general manga readers at all, but his work as an artist is so masterfully done that even Naoki Urasawa (IMO the modern god of manga) has praised his work. In addition, he has won numerous Japan Media Arts Festival awards. I’ve never read any of his other works, but just looking at the art and how its used abstractly as metaphors instead of directly depicting what happens, he is clearly not just a mangaka, but an Artist with a capital A.

Here is some more information about his artistic process if you are interested (courtesy of wikipedia)

Sakamoto said that as a novel, the original work uses metaphors to create imagery, and he decided to show these in his manga adaptation. Examples of his symbolic imagery style include letters of the text in Kokou no Hito being mirrored to convey a character’s panic from losing oxygen, and public outcry from a public execution in Innocent Rouge being depicted as a tsunami.

Sakamoto said he does not plan these in advance and, because his career struggled for so long, he will go with them as long as he finds it interesting because he is ready for his career to end at any moment. He went digital around 2012, citing the possibility of the paper he used being discontinued or his favorite pen stopping working like it used to as the reasons. Sakamoto is known for his detailed and realistic images. When Naoki Urasawa suggested that his work is known for the characters’ lips, the artist explained that he draws them as if they are interior organs.

After drawing the name on paper, Sakamoto’s manga is created completely digitally. The artist takes photographs of his assistants modeling clothing and costumes, some of which he sews himself, in poses that he wants the characters in. He draws using an LCD ablet and has multiple layers to an image that he can add or remove at will; a background created by an assistant, a pre-made outline of the character, a photo of his assistant posing that is cropped and resized to fit the character outline, and a draft he draws on top. Drawing with his right hand, Sakamoto uses a remote in his left to move, rotate or flip images. After finishing the draft, he “inks” the final version using the G Pen setting because it is the thinnest. Sakamoto can not only immediately undo a line he does not like, but can select a specific part of the image, such as an eye, and reposition it. He cited this as one of the reasons he can not go back to traditional ink on paper. The clothes and hair of characters are kept on their own layers. Sakamoto meticulously traces the details of clothing from the photos he takes, and has a digital library of over 2,000 hairstyles he created that he picks pieces from.

Manga Summary:

#DRCL midnight children is an alternate take on Dracula, as I am sure you might have guessed. Characters from the original story are younger and are often given different characterizations than in the original novel. Why elements are added and changed, it is still extremely dedicated to certain details and style of the original novel. A big difference is that it takes place at a boarding school in England, where a mysterious series of crates arrive by ship to be temporarily stored there. It focused on a young Mina Murray and four teenage boys as they fight against the dark influence encroaching on them, as well as dealing with their own personal shame.

This manga has a team of costume makers and photographers and so many assistants for everything from history to effects to Romanian language translations. And it shows. Here is just A SMALL FRACTION of the incredible art of this series.











While the art is certainly atypical of manga, I think I can say with confidence that this is the best drawn series in Grand Jump, and I could easily argue its one of the best drawn things I’ve ever read. Fans of the horror elements and art of Berserk NEED to check this manga out!

Sean’s Thoughts/Should You Read This?:

I’ll be real, at first, this manga is confusing as hell. It never directly tells you what is happening, and a lot of the art is more metaphorical than literal, and when it does reveal information it jumps from place to place.

At first, I thought this was just a badly constructed manga, but once I continued and got to the meat of the story (Vol. 2) it became much more clear and I understood the purpose of all of the slow preamble of the first volume. As I read, I grew to appreciate the story as, ironically, more of a piece of classic literature one would read for class rather than a simple horror story. There is nothing simple about this, and stretching your brain to keep up with it is at first frustrating but eventually becomes more and more rewarding.

I would really really really recommend checking this out in English first, otherwise you will be so freaking confused (I mean you will be confused anyway even in English). Once you have a grasp of the story, switching to Japanese is hard, but manageable. Honestly, its worth it just for the art alone.

TLDR:
You shouldn’t read this if:

  • you want an easy read. Even in English this is abstract and difficult to understand
  • you hate ambiguity
  • you can’t handle various kinds of horror

You should read this if:

  • you like Berserk
  • you like vampires/the Dracula mythos
  • you like classic literature
  • you want a challenge
  • you have eyes, seriously the art is so detailed and incredible that its worth dealing with everything else IMO

I hope you like the write up and check this manga out! Its a labor of love but it is definitely worth it! Hell, just scrolling through to see all the art is worth it honestly! Lemme know what you think!

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Woah, so cool! It’s definitely way above my level so will have to go on the list for the future (-:

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Shrink〜精神科医ヨワイ〜 by 月子

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Read the first chapter here!

Genres: Medical, Drama, Slice of Life, Episodic

Triggers: Mental Illnesses (Including Eating Disorders, Self Harm, et cetera)

Background on the artist:

月子 (Tsukiko) 先生 is veteran mangaka who has been making manga since the run of the millenium. I personally have never read their work before, but from my research, she has worked primarily as a seinen mangaka with occasional shoujo/josei work. All of her major work has been in monthly seinen magazines, including Shrink, which was originally monthly before eventually switching to twice a month.

Given the subject matter and the art of her current manga Shrink, I would say that she spends most of her preparation time doing research and writing as opposed to illustrations like #DRCL. Not that there is anything wrong with that! In fact, I think it serves her manga well, as does the soft art style.
You will see the difference in art style between her earlier works and Shrink, and I think its clear that writing is the more of the focus this time (though this is mostly just inference!)

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Manga Summary:

So the premise of this series is not complicated at all. It follows the patients of Dr. Yowai, a goofy yet genius psychatrist who really cares for his patients and goes out of his way to help anyone he can. Due to a mysterious tradegy in his past, he no longer works at a big hospital, but operates a small clinic in Shinjuku instead.

Thats… Thats kind of it really. Its really just that straightforward. The way it works is that typically a patient will have 3-6 chapters dedicated to their story, starting from before they become a patient, until they are self-substaining on their road to recovery.


At first I was worried that all the mental issues would just be solved like magic, but no. The series really takes it time, and shows the mistakes and relapses and sacrifices that people with mental illnesses go through. There often are no magic cures, but drastic changes that people need to make to their lifestyles in order to make their lives more manageble. That said, the series is still uplifting and hopeful, despite the subject matter. It definitely feels like its designed to be adapted to a medical drama in the future, with its tone and very episodic nature. Like I’m SHOCKED that it isn’t already.

Sean’s Thoughts/Should You Read This?:

I’ll cut to the chase, I think this is a perfect manga for Japanese learners, especially those intermediate and above, and would work wonderfully as a readers first no-furigana manga. If you’ve finished an IBC/IBC Primer book, this is literally the perfect manga for your level IMO.

Why do I think so?

  • A lot of the dialogue is people talking about their feelings, interacting in daily life, and explanations.
  • The series is very episodic, so no need for keeping track of lots of details over a long period of time.
  • The stories themselves are rather simple. Not dull, but easy to follow along with without catching every detail.
  • A reasonable amount of lookups, obviously a lot of medical words, but a lot of the specific illnesses either use katakana or have kanji that lets you intuit the meaning.
  • Additionally, the manga explains each disease in detail, so its a great chance to learn mono-lingually!

Now, I should warn you before you get started, if this is your first non-furigana manga, that you need to be prepared to treat it like a book. The pages can have more dialogue than book pages, and during explanation/diagnosis time the dialogue can get dense.

To prove this point, I grabbed a two page spread.

This is an example of it at its most dense, a majority of the dialogue is thinner and easier than this. Use this as a litmus test for your Japanese reading ability. Reminder that you don’t need to understand every word to get the meaning of the story. If a non-intensive/a casual read of these pages takes over ten minutes, then you might not be ready for it (but don’t let me stop you!).

Overall, this a nice simple episodic manga that is well executed and plenty informative. I think anyone interested should give it a try! Its only 10 or 11 volumes right now, but you can jump in and out as you see fit since its so episodic! I would try the first volume and see if you like it!

TLDR:

You shouldn’t read this if:

  • You are triggered by mental illness (if its a specific issue, the chapter titles mention what the illness is, so you can skip it if you want to!!)
  • You like action or drama about the main characters instead of the patients
  • You want to read manga for the art more than the story

You should read this if:

  • You are looking for your first no-furigana manga
  • You want Japanese reading practice
  • You like medical tv shows
  • You want to read manga by female mangaka (@MaraVos )
  • You want to read something a little bit more difficult now that you are at a higher level of reading comprehension (@Midnightblue )
  • You like seeing people overcome adversity in a positive but realistic way
  • You want some shorter stories to snack on!
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I will read it someday!! When Kansai-ben no longer is a major obstacle for me :sob:. I think I’m actually the person who added いやはや熱海くん to Natively, haha. I wanted to make sure I kept track of it somehow…

Yeah, there are 100% loads of specialist zine communities out there!!

And I’d argue that webcomics are only growing and becoming more and more viable. I think that’s actually the closest approximation to the manga world (in terms of diversity in subjects and such) in the west, though the main difference is that webcomics are almost always self-published (though I’ve seen smaller publishers like Hiveworks pop up, which act as a hub for multiple comics by various authors), and print book distribution usually comes fairly late in the process with them, and tends to happen only with extremely successful ones.

My prior experience following webcomics is actually why I don’t really have an interest in getting into reading manga magazines, haha :sweat_smile:. I have a hard time following a bunch of ongoing stories all at once and getting only bite sized pieces of them at a time. With webcomics, I had the tendency of just ignoring them for months and months and then binging everything all at once…

I did follow western comics for a while (mainly Marvel and a few Image series), and full issues (which are probably roughly comparable to manga chapters in terms of the amount of plot progression that can happen in that space of time) are more doable for me, but I still ultimately preferred reading a series all at once instead of piecemeal…

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Oh my goodness, only two series left! Radiation House, another long medical manga, and Kamo’s Onion is poisoned, a complicated human economics manga by the mangaka who made Liar Game and One Outs (one of my favorite manga of all time).

It’s been less than five weeks since I started, and honestly I didn’t think I would be here at this point already. Thanks everyone who has been reading the write ups, I hope you have some more obscure manga on your reading lists!

Like I mentioned earlier, I’m nowhere near stopping. If anything I’ll probably accelerate my reading even more! My goal is to be completely finished with this magazine before Christmas!!

Makes me day to hear that!!

Ooooh, I’ve never heard of something like that. Sounds really cool!

:rage: :rage: :rage:

Nah I’m just joking. I completely get it! They are difficult to enter into, and so easy to drop. Ironically I find it so much easier to keep up with this magazine because not only the project but the fact I’ve invested so much time makes me want to keep reading it as it comes out! I have a much harder time checking an app for a webcomic personally.

So I went through this when you released it, but I had a great excuse to read it again because…

Your blog post convinced my friend who I showed it to to check out Harta! And since I live near a bookstore (and because the post did such a good job of convincing me), I volunteered to pick up a copy for them. Which lead me to leafing through it, and just like

damn. Damn these manga look so good. I read 神に誓って偽りです and really enjoyed it (manga about deception and the main girl owns a Chinese restaurant?! How could I say no?!) I’m handing it over tomorrow for them, but looking through it combined with your write ups…

Dang, I was going to do a mini project (just four series) of good! Afternoon and then move onto Afternoon and then Big Comic Superior, but I don’t think I can deny Harta much longer… Argh and I’m so close to finishing Grand Jump!

I’m going to see what I can do about acquiring Harta materials to catch up

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Thank you so much for sharing your impressions on Shrink〜精神科医ヨワイ〜 and thank you for the usual trigger warning as well!

It’s nice getting confirmation that it seems that the series still retains a hopeful tone despite dealing with such a difficult topic and I’m glad that you testified to the author keeping it realistic by not just making the patients be curedTM at the end of their episodes.

I’ll definitely check this series out in the future (and misuse it as a way to familiarise myself with psychological terminology in Japanese). :slightly_smiling_face:

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Thanks for tagging me! This looks right up my alley, but currently too difficult due to the kanji. But that’s actually perfect, because I want to focus on learning more kanji in 2024. :slight_smile:

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カモのネギには毒がある: 加茂教授の人間経済学講義
Kamo’s Onion is Poisoned: Lectures on Human Economics by 甲斐谷忍 and Takeshi Natsuhara

Genres: Informative, Psychological, Drama, Economics

Triggers: Scams? The first chapter has some off-colored jokes but it calms down a lot after that.

Background on the artist:

Shinobu Kaitani is secretly one of my favorite mangaka, which is strange as normally I go on and on about the art when I do my write ups, but Kaitani-sensei’s art feels almost lackluster by comparison (his newer work is much cleaner, his older work is honestly kind of rough). While his facial reactions are solid, the rest of his art exists primarily to show the characters reactions to what is being said. So why do I like him so much?

Because goddammit he knows exactly what to make them say. Let me explain.

Kaitani-sensei might have the most well known work in the west out of all the mangaka I have covered doing this project. You see, he made the hit manga (and subsequent drama series and movie) Liar Game

While it’s conclusion is almost ten years old now (I remember waiting for new chapters on Mangafox of all places) This manga remains an absolute classic, and is fondly remembered by Japanese people, especially because of the hit drama series.

It was basically a proto-Squid Game/Kaiji, but, IMO, much much better than the two of them. It was not about a death game but a DEBT game, where players would compete to have their debt erased and earn more money. The games were incredibly complicated and imaginative, and the solution was always a fair puzzle for the reader to solve. They dealt with human emotions, fear and in the end, kindness. It is a phenomenal, phenomenal manga worthy of lots of praise, and it highlights his themes of money, deception, and tricking those who trick others.

But here is the thing, that is only his SECOND best manga. I mentioned that Kaitani-sensei is one of my favorite mangaka, but it’s not because of Liar Game. It’s because of this:

One Outs is one of my favorite sports manga of all time. It’s about a baseball pitcher living in Okinawa and whose sole motivation is money, and he is forced to join the worst team in Japan (at the time a clear Hanshin Tigers stand in).

He has no special physical skills, but is an expert at reading other people. After signing an insane contract that pays him for every out but charges him for every run scored on him, he uses his knowledge of human nature to try to bring his team to the championship, while making every last yen he can.

My share

I am underselling this manga when I say it is absolutely addictive to read. I’ve read it through several times now, and the clever writing and scenarios he created are just chef’s kiss. If nothing else, check out this manga when you can.

One Outs Tokuchi Toua Face Compliation (for my benefit and for others)

Manga Summary:

I know, I know, what the hell is the title? It confused me a lot too. From what I understand, the Onion is a metaphor for peeling back layers of the scammer’s lies and tricking them (poisoning them) into making a mistake that allows the main characters to prevail.

Yes, this manga is about scammers, how appropriate in the post-crypto era of video-makers taking down big scammers and getting thousands of views doing so. The premise is pretty basic; a zany genius economist and university lecturer goes around uncovering scams and doing research, usually by turning the tables on the scammers. Its a very basic concept, and it follows a pretty basic pattern that you can pick up in the first chapter or three. And its almost great to watch the scammer’s reactions after the jig is up.

Sean’s Thoughts/Should You Read This?:

Ummmm, probably not?

Oh it’s a good manga, don’t get me wrong. But it’s also barely a manga? This manga feels like textbook chapters more than anything else. Kaitani-sensei used to be an Electrical Engineer, and god it shows the way he writes. And man does he write. He has absolutely no scruples about making his work as language intensive as possible, with lots of long furigana-less kanji in new combinations and crazy compound words, and often mixing katakana economic terms with kanji economic terms.

It’s the type of manga that is meant to be hard for some adults to read. He does explain a lot, and if you want to decipher complicated explanations near-constantly, by all means go for it! Here are average panels that show what I’m talking about.

Again, not impossible, but often a lot to go through. I’ll be keeping up in Grand Jump as always, so if there is a comrade in arms, let me know!

TLDR:

You shouldn’t read this if:

  • You aren’t N1. I’m N2 and it was a struggggllllllleeeeeee. Not impossible, just overwhelming.
  • You read manga for the art
  • You aren’t in the mood for learning

You should read this if:

  • You liked Liar Game
  • You want to learn complicated Japanese/Economics
  • You like watching Coffeezilla videos
  • You are masochistic and want something really hard to read to test yourself.

Read the first chapter here for free!

Sorry, I feel like I talked more about One Outs that KamoNegi, but honestly you should check out One Outs first, and if you like that and want more, check out Liar Game and then KamoNegi!

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I feel like 鴨 being the slang for the swindler’s mark, onion being eaten with duck, and the proverb 鴨が葱を背負って来る probably also factor into it.

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Wow! That makes so much sense!!! Thanks for enlightening me!!! I think I was still too early for this manga haha.

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Titles are often super hard because of that kind of context free cultural reference. I had to go searching for the proverb…

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Radiation House by Tomohiro Yokomaku and Taishi Mori

Natively Link coming soon!

Genres: Medical, Drama, Romance

Triggers: Medical Issues, Body Parts (not gore)

Background on the artist:

Taishi Mori, a manga writer and illustrator, was a published mangaka before Radiation House, having a comedy ecchi manga published in a smaller monthly magazine for several years. However, Radiation House is undoubtedly what he will be remembered for. He only does the illustrations, since the writing for this manga is so complicated due to the medical aspects, but he is also currently releasing Asoko de Hataraku Musubu-san in Monthly Shonen Sunday.

NEOBK-2704573

This is a romance about a woman who works at a condom company… So yeah…

205484l

(slightly NSFW)

In case this and his earlier work didn’t tip you off, Mori-sensei is kind of horny? It comes up a bit in Radiation House, but it’s mostly really tame fanservice, probably intended to lighten the mood, but frequently feels out of place in such a normally serious manga.

One compliment I would like to say is that he is a really good artist, especially since he has to write three slightly longer chapters a month, that’s basically on Weekly Magazine pace! Thats really good Mori-sensei, sorry for calling you horny!

Manga Summary:

The name might be confusing to some, but this is a medical manga about Medical Imagery. It follows a genius MI technician trying to reunite with his childhood crush who is now a doctor in the radiation department. A slow romance begins to burn, hampered by the fact she doesn’t remember him!

Okay so overall this is basically just House MD, but instead of the main character being an asshole, he is just quiet and easily misunderstood. It follows a very episodic structure, averaging a little over a medical case a volume, with an overarching will they/won’t they romance between the doctor and the technician. Each patient has a problem that requires a different type of imaging to be used, and there is plenty of drama that the other doctors and technicians also get swept up in. Don’t worry, the premise and general story of this manga is not complicated at all!

The content, however…

Sean’s Thoughts/Should You Read This?:

Ummmm, no, not in Japanese.

Remember when I wrote about Shrink, and mentioned that it would be a great gateway for upper intermediate reading? Radiation House is not that. Instead, its like the subject matter and structure of Shrink (though much harder because of all the biological and scientific terms) combined with the complexity and long explanations of KamoNegi. There is a reason that this one took me the longest to read!

Radiation House is above all else, technical and extremely thorough. Take a look at some of these explanations!



So, it’s not impossible, it’s just hard to wrap your head around. He does do a good job of explaining it! So it’s doable, but might be a struggle for most non-native readers. Honestly, I think this might even be too much for my wife, just because its soooo technical.

I actually have an advantage for this manga. I majored in Physics in university and actually took a class on Medical Imaging technology. AND IT BARELY HELPED ME AT ALL. Admittedly it was a while ago, but like DAMN. I understand why there is a writer and a separate medical practitioner to help write it, and why Mori-sensei feels the need to break it up with some comedy.

That said, is it a good read in English? Yeah! It totally is! I love House MD (just realized now I could have made a Radiation House MD joke… Oh well!). It’s a great medical drama, and, ignoring difficulty, is much more my style than Shrink was. While some of the characters are annoying (especially in the beginning) eventually you warm up to them, and the romance is a nice slow burn.

There actually is a drama and a movie of this that you can watch (I think it is on Netflix?), if you want to experience it that way. But personally, the manga is where it is at. The art is sometimes just so stunning, especially for a bimonthly medical manga, that you should check it out for that reason alone.


TLDR:

You shouldn’t read this if:

  • You aren’t N1 and/or a scientist. Even with my specific background this stuff is hard
  • You don’t want 10,000,000 lookups

You should read this if:

  • You like TV medical dramas
  • You like good art
  • Ummm, thats really it. Its a good manga I promise! But is exactly what it is and nothing more, if that makes sense.

Read the first chapter for free here!

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Wow, that looks incredible. Pity the difficulty looks like… medical textbook level.

These are some great finds.

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I did it I did it I did it!!!

In about 5 weeks I have completely caught up to all of the manga I actually wanted to read in Grand Jump!! AHHHHHHH!!! I’M SO HAPPY!!!

This is my first manga magazine that I consider myself up to date on; while there are plenty of manga left in the magazine, I’ll mostly just puruse them casually, and maybe later get into them (right now they don’t seem to be my style, though I could be wrong!)

When I do, I’ll add their entries here just like before, and of course I’ll keep updating with the biweekly issues and introduce new manga that pop up there (which would be easy for everyone to check out since it would be at the beginning of their run!).

This does mean that the main leg of my Grand Jump journey is over. However, I am not content with only going through one manga magazine!! I have MAAANNNNYYYYYY possible magazine options lined up for the future (and honestly I also need to get cracking on the classic manga club that people were interested in!)

So, please keep following the thread for more interesting manga and information about manga magazines!! And post anything you find interesting or and questions or ideas you have! The idea that people are reading my manga ramblings at all is absolutely buck-wild to me, and the support and comments always make my day! :smiling_face_with_three_hearts: :smiling_face_with_three_hearts: :smiling_face_with_three_hearts:

Thank you all so much! More details about the next project will be coming out next week! There will also be a poll because I want y’all’s feedback and want to know what you are most interesting in reading about next!

Stay tuned!

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Heh, I knew this because I remember the cast of the drama showing up as the challenger team in an episode of VS Arashi. Someone I recognised was on the team… Endo Ken’ichi, I think?

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Your writeups are so fun to read. (My favorites are the ones where you didn’t like the manga and tell us not to read it. It’s the hater in me, I suppose. )

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Your writeups are genuinely so helpful!! They touch everything I’m curious about before I decide to jump into a new Manga and I found soooo many I want to read through your thread. I haven’t really found Manga I was interested in for a long time before you started your thread. So thanks so much for taking all this effort, it is deeply appreciated!

(Plus also @rodan !! I really liked your Harta writeup a lot too and it helped me a lot getting into Harta)

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Since the manga you find is so different to what is in the beginner book clubs here (and that was my first and only exposure to manga so far) this epic journey of yours has really opened my eyes to what can be a manga. Thanks so much, I’m so happy you’ll be doing even more!!!

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