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Blue Period (Japanese: ブルーピリオド, Hepburn: Burū Piriodo) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Tsubasa Yamaguchi.The series has been serialized in Kodansha's seinen manga magazine Monthly Afternoon since June 2017 and has been collected in sixteen tankōbon volumes as of November 2024.
On June 17, 2017, she launched her second series, titled Blue Period, in Monthly Afternoon. [6] In 2019, Yamaguchi got married. [7] In the same year, Blue Period was nominated for the Manga Taishō and the Kodansha Manga Award in the general category. [8] [9] In 2020, Blue Period won the Manga Taishō and the Kodansha Manga Award in the general ...
Monthly Afternoon (月刊アフタヌーン, Gekkan Afutanūn) is a Japanese monthly seinen manga anthology published by Kodansha under the Afternoon line of magazines. The first issue was released with a cover date of January 25, 1986.
Picasso's Blue Period, the work of Pablo Picasso between 1901 and 1904 Blue Period (album) , by Miles Davis, 1953 Blue Period (manga) , by Tsubasa Yamaguchi, 2017
Blue Exorcist (Japanese: 青の 祓魔師 ( エクソシスト ), Hepburn: Ao no Ekusoshisuto) is a Japanese dark fantasy manga series written and illustrated by Kazue Kato. The story revolves around Rin Okumura , a teenager who discovers that he and his twin brother Yukio are the sons of Satan , born from a human woman, and he is the ...
Skip and Loafer [a] (Japanese: スキップとローファー, Hepburn: Sukippu to Rōfā) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Misaki Takamatsu. It has been serialized in Kodansha's Monthly Afternoon since August 2018.
This is a list of notable manga that have been licensed in English, listed by their English title. This list does not cover anime, light novels, dōjinshi, manhwa, manhua, manga-influenced comics, or manga only released in Japan in bilingual Japanese-English editions.
The first major kibyōshi to be published was Kinkin sensei eiga no yume, often translated as Master Flashgold's Splendiferous Dream, by Koikawa Harumachi in 1775. It combined the wit and subject matter of fashionbooks with the graphic nature of the otogi-zōshi to retell the classic noh drama Kantan in contemporary Edo.