Six, actually, not including people who've picked up a single volume just to shut me and Eric up.ich1990 (post: 1399769) wrote:The easiest, of course, is JoJo's Bizarre Adventure, which at last count was being read by exactly five members on this site, including myself.
Fish and Chips (post: 1403544) wrote:Lone Wolf and Cub and Samurai Executioner by Kazuo Koike and Goseki Kojima - 28 volumes, 10 volumes*
Something that's not a collection of short stories or a short-lived serial, though I'm aware UC at least has read Lone Wolf. Practically the grandfather of all current samurai Manga, or at least that which takes itself seriously, and Lone Wolf (and Samurai Executioner) is very serious. And very wordy - you'll need to set some time aside. Former vassal of the Shogun, Ogami Itto is framed by a rival samurai household, losing his position, wealth, authority, and family. Left only with his young son, Daigoro, the two walk the road to revenge and kill a bunch of joes with a freaking sweet baby carriage, including a dude named Yamada Asaemon who got his own story serialized in Samurai Executioner. Good reading for long nights.
Toto! The Wonderful Adventure by Yuko Osada - 5 volumes
Your standard meandering Shounen, but it's pretty good for what it managed to fit in its short run. The first volume in particular is awesome, and the final has one of the best Here Comes the Calvary moments in all of Manga (all of Manga!). Lots of references to the Wizard of Oz, but you probably knew that.
Fish and Chips (post: 1403544) wrote:
Toto! The Wonderful Adventure by Yuko Osada - 5 volumes
Your standard meandering Shounen, but it's pretty good for what it managed to fit in its short run. The first volume in particular is awesome, and the final has one of the best Here Comes the Calvary moments in all of Manga (all of Manga!). Lots of references to the Wizard of Oz, but you probably knew that.
Atria35 (post: 1399787) wrote:[
Mixed Vegetables- yeah, it's shoujo... but it has FOOD! A story about a girl and a boy who are in the same cooking class, but she wants to do sushi (even though her family owns a bakery) and he wants to do sweets (though his family owns a sushi shop). It's more for a younger age set, but it's very sweet.
!
Atria35 (post: 1399595) wrote:I Am A Piano- an 8-page one-shot about a piano and what it goes through during its life. It stylizes the piano as a person, and 'playing' becomes a dance. And as time goes on she gets more worn, until coming back to someone who loves the piano, as old and worn as it (she) is.
airichan623 (post: 1407402) wrote:I just read it... I love that whispy looking art style!
Fish and Chips (post: 1403544) wrote:
Toto! The Wonderful Adventure by Yuko Osada - 5 volumes
Your standard meandering Shounen, but it's pretty good for what it managed to fit in its short run. The first volume in particular is awesome, and the final has one of the best Here Comes the Calvary moments in all of Manga (all of Manga!). Lots of references to the Wizard of Oz, but you probably knew that.
[SIZE="1"]**Condensed in the American print to 3 volumes.[/SIZE]
Mr. Hat'n'Clogs (post: 1413242) wrote:Well, I went to the library today, and decided to read a new manga that I'd seen a bit of advertising from Viz for, which is Library Wars: Love and War. From the first two chapters, it's nothing fantastic, but it isn't terrible either. The premise is unique, even if it seems a bit farfetched at times.
Atria35 (post: 1399787) wrote:Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Service- This, I'm pretty sure that no one else here reads. It's not for the faint of heart. Full of dark humor and an interesting cast of characters, this is about a bunch of college kids trying to make a living off of their skills... which means that since they graduated from a Buddhist college with indifferent sgrades but have interesting skills (learned outside of class), it involves trying to fulfill the last wishes of the dead. Three have supernatural abilities- one can address the soul of the dead for a certain time after death, one can dowse for the bodies, and one is a channeler who happens to be eternally channeling the spirit of a foul-mouthed alien. The other two are girls, one an embalmer who's constantly out of work because they cremate in Japan, and another a web genious. The dead walk, talk, and other creepy stuff happens. There's also graphic depictions of the dead.
goldenspines (post: 1399605) wrote:Wallflower: I know people have heard of this, at least, but I'm not sure how many have actually read more than a few pages or chapters. Once you get used to the art style and the rather morbid humor, the series is actually quite interesting. It's about five guys who have to turn a horror loving girl into a lady or else they will be thrown out on the street to starve (because they are too beautiful to work? I dunno. Manga doesn't have to make sense XD)
Htom Sirveaux (post: 1415500) wrote:I've not seen anyone else on CAA mention Tsutomu Nihei's ten-volume cyberpunk series, BLAME! or its single-volume prequel, NOiSE. It's good stuff, if you prefer to keep your manga series short. Very sparsely dialogued though, wich can make it confusing at times for lack of information.
I may sometime check out one of Nihei's other titles, Biomega. It's loosely tied to BLAME! in that it's set in a familiar location (Toha Heavy Industries), though at a different time.
Also, I've read the first volume of Hitoshi Iwaaki's Parasyte, though I wasn't terribly impressed. However I would be willing to reread it and pick up volume 2 sometime. Maybe the story'll get better.
wildpurplechild (post: 1417977) wrote:Hollow Fields-This one is not Japanese, but I still like it. A girl accidently goes to a school for mad scientists! The courses include grave digging, monster making, and all sorts of fun stuff.
Atria35 (post: 1418007) wrote:Own it! It's so cute! I just with that the ending was less abrupt- I'd like to see more of the 'after'.
The Dreaming- twin girls must lie about being twins to be able to go to a boarding school in Australia. Stuff happened long ago at the school- and it starts reoccuring! Not the happiest of manga to read, but if you like horror, a good read.
animewarrior (post: 1418471) wrote:Now for my titles:
After School Nightmare by Setona Mizushiro
About a transgender highschool student. A commentary on gender identity, and how people get past their issues. Also deals with family dynamics, romance, the view of one's self. Highly recommended for mature readers. I'm tempted to buy it. Not for everyone (has some tastefully dealt sex scenes, and the nightmare sequences can be violent with blood) oh DON'T READ THE WIKIPEDIA ARTICLE!!! You'll spoil the story for yourself (no fun). Complete in 10 volumes.
There was actually a thread about Blade of the Immortal a while back, but it has been dead for a long, long time.Mr. Hat'n'Clogs (post: 1421659) wrote:Blade of the Immortal by Hiroaki Samura
I know Fish has read this(much more than I have), but I haven't seen any mention of it since I joined. An immortal warrior who wishes to die makes a contract with the one responsible for his immortality that he will cease being immortal after he kills 100 evil men for every good person he has killed, thus, he has to kill a thousand evil men. A girl named Rin comes up to him, asking that he help her get revenge on the people who killed her father and raped and killed her mother. Basically super awesome and my favorite art I've seen from a manga. Content level is pretty high though.
ich1990 (post: 1421813) wrote:There was actually a thread about Blade of the Immortal a while back, but it has been dead for a long, long time.
I personally love the fights and super awesome art, but dropped it for content reasons. Seriously, you see the insides of people so often that it could work as an anatomy and physiology textbook.
Well if that is the case, then I recommend it. It has a solid plot, excellent characterization, relatively little nudity and sexual content (when compared with its peers such as Berserk, Lone Wolf and Cub, and Vagabond), and volumes upon volumes of gory and stylish samurai fights with cool looking weapons.Atria35 (post: 1421863) wrote:As a biology student, I appreciate that level of realism XD But seriously, I've been innurred from the dissections I've done. As long as they're anatomically correct, it doesn't bother me if it's on the page.
I was just about to post this...good thing I read the rest of the thread first. =) So yeah, I've obviously read this...it's pretty much my favorite thing. The anime adaption wasn't bad, but they cut off right before my favorite arc in the story. So if you watched the anime and enjoyed it even a little, I would suggest picking up the manga. Because it gets a lot better.MasterDias (post: 1400689) wrote:Amatsuki: A high-school student, Tokidoki, is seemingly transported to a fantasy version of Edo-period Japan after being attacked by a monster at a virtual-reality history museum. He befriends several others including a fellow schoolmate who was transported around the same time but arrived several years before, and a swordswoman with a demon dog living inside her. Meanwhile, the story occasionally cuts to a subplot back in the real world involving a group of detectives investigating the shady corporation who created the virtual museum.
Oh, fabulous! Someone told me about this manga a while back, and I had forgotten the title. Thanks a bunch, I'm going to read this as soon as possible!chichiriNoDa (post: 1421965) wrote:Btw you might want to check out a oneshot series called Omoide Emanon. Its about this mysterious girl who holds a 3-billion memory dating back to the first life on Earth, pretty interesting.
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