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The Beginning After the End is an American web novel series written by TurtleMe and illustrated by Fuyuki23. It began serialization on Tapas in January 2017. A webtoon adaptation, also illustrated by Fuyuki23, began serialization on Tapas in July 2018.
It is serialized in the boys' love digital manga magazine B-Boy P! since September 10, 2019. [1] After its initial end in May 2020, Tsuyu resumed the manga to coincide with the April 2022 broadcast of the television drama adaptation. [1] The chapters were later released in two bound volumes by Libre under the B-Boy P! Comics imprint.
Yoshikazu Miyano (宮野由美, Miyano Yoshikazu) Voiced by: Soma Saito [2] (Japanese); Joshua Waters [3] (English) A short, bishōnen first-year student. Despite being attracted to girls, he is a self-identified fudanshi-- a male fan of yaoi manga-- and is watchful for tropes of the genre when they appear in his real life.
Hitorijime My Hero (Japanese: ひとりじめマイヒーロー, Hepburn: Hitoriji me Maihīrō), also known as My Very Own Hero, is a Japanese yaoi [2] manga series written and illustrated by Memeco Arii about the romances between a teacher and his student, and the teacher's younger brother with his childhood friend.
It is serialized in the boys' love manga website Comic Fleur since January 2019. [1] After its initial end, Harekawa continued the series with Senpai, This Can't Be Love! Brush Up. [1] The chapters were later released in three bound volumes by Kadokawa under the Fleur Comics imprint. Harekawa interviewed several people working in the CG ...
My Love Mix-Up! won the 67th Shogakukan Manga Award in the shōjo category in 2022. [34] In the 2021 edition of the Kono Manga ga Sugoi! guidebook, the series tied with A Sign of Affection as the ninth highest ranked manga for female audiences. [35] The series was also nominated for the first Ebook Japan manga award. [36]
The Finder series (Japanese: ファインダーシリーズ, Hepburn: Faindā Shirīzu) is a Japanese manga written and illustrated by Ayano Yamane. It is serialized in the semimonthly yaoi manga magazine Be × Boy Gold since 2001. Several adaptations of the manga have been released, including original video animations, light novels, and audio ...
The series was praised for its 1980s-reminiscent artwork, [17] [18] with Sean Gaffney of Manga Bookshelf favorably comparing it to Ranma ½ and Kimagure Orange Road. [19] Anthony Gramuglia noted in his review of the series for Anime Feminist that Go for It, Nakamura! is "part of a new wave of [boys' love] manga that are more about identity than ...