Yen Plus Info is a totally unofficial fan site about Yen Plus, a monthly comics/manga/manhwa anthology published by Yen Press. This is not the official Yen Press site.

ANN gets Hassled; Yen Press prints money, part II

Anime news site Anime News Network features a weekly podcast which is usually rendered unlistenable by the nasally voice and general douchebaggery of co-host Zac Bertschy. (Yeah, the guy rubs me the wrong way.) However, if you can put that aside, their most recent show features an interview with Yen Press honcho Kurt Hassler. The interview begins at about the 16:45 point in the show. I haven’t been able to listen to it much yet, so I’m not yet sure if there’s anything mind-blowing in there, but it ought to be worth a listen if you’re interested in the man behind Yen Press’s surprising success.

And speaking of success, comic site Comic Book Resources has posted some heavy stats and analysis on how well many comic companies did in 2009. If you find that a bit tl;dr and/or mostly have an interest in manga distributors, Anime Vice offers an easier-to-parse breakdown. In terms of dollars, Yen Plus more than tripled the previous year’s sales in 2009, and it looks like they’re in for another great year this year, thanks to that little Twilight comic you might have heard something about; they’ve committed to printing more volumes of Twilight than all of their titles combined sold in 2009, which shows tremendous confidence in that product. If it can live up to its hype and sell, a whole lot of money is going to be made.

A twisted page

The data for the March 2010 issue is now in the database. Sigh, I kinda miss the days when every other issue would introduce a new comic or feature a preview… But maybe I shouldn’t jinx it.

For those who haven’t purchased or received your issue yet, here’s a preview page to tide you over, featuring a pivotal point in this issue’s chapter of Maximum Ride, which I totally didn’t just scan into Photoshop and then mask out the original text and replace it with my own.

lol… a little?

Manga Movable Feast: Sexy Voice and Robo

David Welsh, blogger at The Manga Curmudgeon, had an idea for what he (somewhat puzzlingly) called the Manga Movable Feast; a manga title and date would be announced, and manga bloggers around the web would be invited to post about that title on the week of that date. The first title was Iou Kuroda’s Sexy Voice and Robo, and the date was Monday, February 8. I decided I wanted to join in, so I headed over to Amazon and placed my order for a copy of Sexy Voice and Robo. However, I opted to use Amazon’s free shipping option, which is marketed as “Super Saver Shipping” but should perhaps more accurately be titled “Whenver We Get Around To It Shipping,” as I ended up not getting my copy of until Tuesday, and I just finished it Saturday.

But perhaps being late to the party will give me a unique perspective. I was careful to avoid others’ posts about the book until I was done reading it for myself, and now that I’ve caught up on those other posts (which are listed here), I can react to those as well as the book itself.

Let’s start with the book. The curiously-titled Sexy Voice and Robo is, essentially, an episodic mystery series. The eponymous characters are Nico, a fourteen-year-old girl who part-times as a phone flirt (think phone sex, but less overtly sexual), hence “Sexy Voice;” and Iichiro, a stereotypical otaku adult loser with an unhealthy obsession with giant robot toys, hence “Robo.” (Erica Friedman provides us with a character study of Robo.) Nico’s job has made her quite skilled at not only altering her voice, but accurately judging the appearance and personality of the men she talks to just by the sound of their voice. Besides the money, Nico plans on parlaying her job and her talent into an eventual career in espionage, and she gets her chance when a mysterious old man in a café learns of Nico’s talents and hires her to solve a mystery for him… and one mystery is followed by another. As Nico becomes one of the mysterious man’s henchmen, hapless Robo becomes Nico’s henchman, mostly because his adultness provides Nico transportation and access to places she wouldn’t be able to get to otherwise.

The structure is pretty standard for a mystery (Kate Dacey compares it to the American novel Harriet the Spy, which also features a young girl sleuth), but executed well enough that it doesn’t feel stale or trite. In each chapter, a mystery presents itself, but by the end, Sexy Voice has cracked it owing mostly to her gift of gab. There’s a good variety to the stories presented. Though each chapter is independently episodic, there’s an overarching story involving the old man’s past which is revealed in stops and starts. The book’s ending has struck others as rather abrupt and left them calling for more, but I personally thought that the ending in relation to that overarching storyline is well-placed, and that the reader can draw their own conclusion as to where Nico’s spying career will go from there - I know I sure did.

The reactions to Kuroda’s art seems to be all over the board. Kuroda uses bold thick lines which appear to have been applied by brush, mostly sticking with simple black and white and using very little toning (to the point that it sometimes even looks out of place when he does); the look is very different from many modern Japanese comics, and rather refreshing. The look of the characters’ eyes in particular struck me as I started reading - and then I came across the chapter in which eyes play an important role. It’s rather cool how it unfolds, so I won’t say more than that, though unfortunately some of the other reviews you’ll find as part of this Feast spoil it a bit. However, it struck me initially that Kuroda was having some problems with perspective - things which should have been further back in his art didn’t look further back. Everything looked like it was on the same plane… It’s kind of hard to describe. In retrospect, I found this aspect of the art bothering me less as I got further into the book; whether the art improved in this regard or I just stopped noticing it, I’m not sure. There’s also the case where it can be sometimes difficult to discern just what the heck is happening in the more action-packed panels and you end up hoping that whatever happened will be explained later on in the chapter, but that seems to be an annoying fault of a whole lot of manga, so I won’t hold it against Sexy Voice and Robo uniquely.

The book itself is released by Viz and was originally printed in 2005. The pages’ dimensions are the same size as an anthology like Yen Plus (or, presumably, the one this series was initially serialized in), rather than being reduced in size for trade printing as is typical for manga; sorry, but if you have a “manga shelf,” this book may not fit on it. The book, which contains all chapters in one volume, runs almost 400 pages, starts with a note by Kuroda, and, interestingly, ends with an essay by one of Viz’s editors about Kuroda’s artistic rendition of Tokyo. Overall, it’s not a bad presentation, though I do want to fault Viz for leaving a lot of the text in Kuroda’s art untranslated, even when it was more than trivial in terms of the story. One part that struck me in particular was a note that one of the more important characters in the overall story arc finds. Viz doesn’t translate the note at all, though with my infantile Japanese skills, I was able to make out it was telling him to kill someone - rather a crucial plot element, I think. What other plot points did I miss because I couldn’t read them?

Kuroda’s unique and mostly pleasant art and strong stories come together to provide a cohesive whole which ends up as a rather fun read, particularly if you’re a fan of mysteries. It’s well done, but the whole is not more than the sum of its parts - I cannot unilaterally declare that you should “run out and buy [it] right now” as Christopher Butcher does, and I can see how it wouldn’t appeal to everyone - “Mehhhh,” says Sadie Mattox. You’re going to have to enjoy the mystery genre, and be at least tolerant of art which is well outside of the norm. But if that’s you, I think you’ll find something to like about Sexy Voice and Robo.

Okay, review ends there. I’m going to finish off this post by going a bit more in-depth into an issue brought up by other Feasters, and will maybe spoil the story a bit, so please only continue reading past the next paragraph if you’ve finished reading Sexy Voice and Robo yourself, lest you be spoiled. (If you’re on the front page right now, click the “Read more” link below.) To space things out, let me sell the site a bit for those visiting it for the first time.

Hi there. I’m your humble editor, Garrett Albright. This is Yen Plus Info, a fan site primarily providing news and info about the Yen Plus comics anthology published by Yen Press, though lately I’ve been sharing my experiences with other comics both foreign and domestic. Why not check out the front page and browse a while?

I yen for you to be my valentine

My March issue came Saturday, so I’ll take a short break in this long stretch of non-Yen-related stories to talk about it a little. Nightschool is on a hiatus at Svetlana Chmakova helps prepare the third collected volume for print, but in its place is a bonus two-page comic she drew about her trip to Japan. The comic features a very nicely done coloring job, and though it’s mostly drawn in the same silly cartoony style she uses for her Nightschool bonus pages, there’s one panel in particular that… well, you’ll just have to see for yourself. That’s all I’ve been able to read so far of it comics-wise, but JuYuon’s Editor’s Letter promises that this issue’s chapter of One Fine Day is “especially heartwarming,” so that might be something else for you fans of the cute to look forward to.

Now, here’s a somewhat lengthy rant to send out to my fellow bloggers before I sign off. It may not be relevant or interesting to others, so I’ll put it behind a break so that I don’t flood the front page with my babbling.

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