Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
978-4-7575-9644-3 978-4-7575-9645-0 ( SE ) A spin-off manga series illustrated by Puyo, titled The Angel Next Door Spoils Me Rotten: After the Rain ( お隣の天使様にいつの間にか駄目人間にされていた件 after the rain , Otonari no Tenshi-sama ni Itsu no Ma ni ka Dame Ningen ni Sareteita Ken after the rain ) , began ...
In 2015, ComiketPC organized a special event specifically focused on doujinshi related to the series. [41] Affectionately nicknamed "Kuroket", the event hosted approximately 2,400 circles producing Kuroko's Basketball items. [42] In August 2018, ComiketPC announced modified schedules for Comikets 96, 97, and 98 due to the 2020 Summer Olympics.
A doujinshi convention is a type of event dedicated to the sale of doujinshi, or self-published books (typically manga, collections of illustrations, or novels). These events are known in Japanese as doujin sokubaikai ( 同人即売会 , 'doujin sale event') or doujinshi sokubaikai ( 同人誌即売会 , 'doujinshi sale event').
Doujinshi (同人誌), also romanized as dōjinshi, is the Japanese term for self-published print works, such as magazines, manga, and novels.Part of a wider category of doujin (self-published) works, doujinshi are often derivative of existing works and created by amateurs, though some professional artists participate in order to publish material outside the regular industry.
Tân biên truyền kỳ mạn lục (新編傳奇漫錄) The Truyền kỳ mạn lục (傳奇漫錄, "Casual Records of Transmitted Strange Tales") is a 16th-century Vietnamese historical text, in part a collection of legends, by Nguyễn Dữ (阮嶼) composed in Classical Chinese. [1] The collection was translated into French by UNESCO in 1962.
The musician Phạm Duy adapted The Tale of Kiều into an epic song cycle entitled Minh họa Kiều ("Illustrating Kieu") in 1997. The Tale of Kieu was the inspiration for the 2007 movie Saigon Eclipse , which moved the storyline into a modern Vietnamese setting with a modern-day immigrant Kiều working in the massage parlor industry in San ...
In the mid-1990s, estimates of the size of the Japanese yaoi fandom were at 100,000-500,000 people; [3] at around that time, the long-running yaoi anthology June had a circulation of between 80,000 and 100,000, twice the circulation of the "best-selling" gay lifestyle magazine Badi. [17]
[2] [3] It was later published in tankōbon format on 31 May 2016, and a paperback version was published on 30 June 2016. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] It was published in English as Metamorphosis by FAKKU digitally on 27 October 2016 and physically in February 2017; a hardbound edition subtitled "Hard Edition" was announced at Anime Expo 2022 [ 6 ] and released ...