Wishes, hopes and dreams

After what feels like a solid month of gray skies and falling snow, it’s therapeutic to think of good things to come, like ice-free roads, the color green, and temperatures above freezing. That kind of optimism (or mitigation) was the inspiration for this week’s Flipped. But you know what? Awesome as those titles may well prove to be, I’m hoping they’re joined and perhaps even trumped by another 2010 possibility.

Last week, a certain publisher was teasing the Twitterati about an imminent announcement of a new license of a work by Osamu Tezuka featuring a “great female lead.” If you’re me, this can only mean one thing.

I could be wrong, but I’ll let that mistake live in my heart for as long as contrarian reality allows. This would make a certain publisher the fulfiller of two of my license requests, not to mention the only publisher to fulfill any at all. It’s a good thing I don’t make any unseemly promises when I make these requests.

Okay, back to the exciting books we know we’re going to get in 2010: one of them is by Fumi Yoshinaga, who has a one-shot coming out soon, courtesy of Viz. Christopher Butcher also adds Yoshinaga’s Antique Bakery (DMP) to his roster of Ten Manga That Changed Comics. It’s an excellent choice, and I thought it was a particularly intriguing one in juxtaposition to his other recent choice, Gutsoon’s Raijin Comics. Raijin fairly dripped testosterone, as Chris notes, but what some might forget is that DMP’s manga catalog was also quite the men’s locker room pretty much right up until the publication of Antique Bakery. Bambi and Her Pink Gun, Worst, IWGP and the Robot anthology were the books that defined DMP’s output prior to the launch of Juné, and Antique Bakery certainly seems like the fulcrum point for that shift.

Go, vote: new one-shot

Deb Aoki isn’t making it easy on us with her 2009 manga polls. The latest is Best New One-Shot Manga, and my vote went to…

I could easily have voted for GoGo Monster, but I’ve already cast my ballot for that great book in another category.

Go, vote: new yaoi

Love is in the air over at About.Com, as Deb Aoki asks readers to pick the Best New Yaoi Manga. My pick…

… benefits from being written and drawn by est em and shepherded into English by Matt Thorn.

Go, vote: new all-ages manga

Deb Aoki’s newest manga poll asks what was the Best New All-Ages Manga. I chose…

… because it’s funny and adorable.

Go, vote: new manhwa, new global

The polls keep coming at About.Com. First up is the always hotly contested Best New International Manga, and my vote went to…

Next is Best New Korean Manhwa, and my ballot was cast for…

That doesn’t mean I’m not very fond of Time and Again (Yen Press), written and illustrated by JiUn Yun, which came in second and probably would have won my vote in a year when Mijeong hadn’t been published.

Go, vote: new comedy

There’s an element of schizophrenia in the latest new manga poll from Deb Aoki, Best New Comedy Manga, in that some are incredible comics and at least one is, by some trustworthy accounts, “odious.” Certainly some of the funniest manga of last year leap gleefully into the realm of bad taste and are funnier for doing so, and I might have had difficulty casting my vote had it not been for the candidacy of…

My favorite manga of 2009, hands down.

Go, vote: new seinen/josei drama

The latest of Deb Aoki’s reader’s polls is a tough one: Best New Seinen/Josei – Drama. The slate is a veritable embarrassment of riches, but I cast my vote for…

Speaking of that fine book, it leads Jog’s list of Top Ten Comics of 2009. And speaking of Jog, he ponders the various allures of Death Note in the latest installment of The Comics Reporter’s Holiday Interview series.

Milestone musings

I love it when other people do the heavy lifting and I can just kibitz around the corners. The Robot 6 crew has a two-part look at the most important comics of the decade. Chris Butcher has started an examination of the most influential manga of the last ten years. And Deb Aoki has composed a list of the decade’s manga milestones. All are excellent reads, and I really don’t have that much to add, but I did want to mention a few of what I consider to be milestones from the last decade.

The launch of CMX: I knew when I mentioned this on Twitter that someone would leap in to mention that goddamn Tenjho Tenge mess. Never has so tacky and middlebrow a comic cast such a stain on something that’s otherwise admirable and sustaining, but there you go. (I guess it could be viewed as a double milestone in that it demonstrated the influence of fans who demand authenticity, even down to whether or not the victim was wearing panties during the rape scene.) For me, though, the milestone nature of the event lies in the fact that one of the big two spandex publishers took manga seriously enough to launch an imprint dedicated to release of comics from Japan. Has DC central given the imprint the support it needs in terms of distribution? Judging by bookstore shelves and in comparison to the volume of DC Universe and Vertigo titles that are readily and constantly available, the answer is clearly no. But CMX continues to publish excellent manga, and that counts.

Imitative acts: Speaking of spandex publishers paying attention to manga, CMX remains the most honorable example. The less said about the whole Marvel Mangaverse thing the better, and while Marvel offered some excellent books with its manga-influenced Tsunami line, the only one that’s survived is Runaways, and that stretches the definition of survival a bit. One could also mention DC’s Minx in this context, as it was clearly an attempt to get some of those shôjo dollars. Of course, if DC had just devoted some of Minx’s massive marketing budget to CMX and improved the imprint’s bookstore distribution instead of cranking out a line of indifferently edited, clumsily marketed titles, Minx might have been entirely superfluous instead of just mostly so.

Scott Pilgrim: Deb rightly notes that Svetlana Chamkova’s Dramacon was the clear winner of Tokyopop’s original English-Language manga initiative. I would argue that the defining manga-influenced comic of the last decade is Bryan Lee O’Malley’s enduring slacker saga. To me, the influences evident in O’Malley’s comics aren’t in any way imitative. They’re repurposed to his own creative ends, which is very exciting to see, and it’s a quality that Chmakova is exhibiting with increasing frequency. In my opinion, the more imitative a work of global manga is, the less memorable or enduring it is. I think this perspective is borne out by merely looking at the manga-influenced creators who continue to thrill audiences: Chmakova (with Nightschool), Adam (Empowered) Warren, Nina (Yôkaiden) Matsumoto, Brandon (King City) Graham and, of course, O’Malley.

Nouvelle manga: From a purely qualitative standpoint, there was probably no more exciting development in the last decade than the emergence of Fanfare/Ponent Mon and its explication of the whole nouvelle manga aesthetic. While Viz gets the credit for first publishing Jiro Taniguchi’s work in English, Fanfare must be credited with establishing him as a must-read creator for discerning comics fans. And Fanfare also published what I believe to be the greatest anthology of the decade, Japan as Viewed by 17 Creators, featuring a murderer’s row of Japanese and European cartoonists demonstrating their spectacular creative prowess.

I had hoped that one of the decade’s milestones would have been the establishment of josei as a marketable manga category. Many tried, but none succeeded. Maybe the 2010s will be kinder. On the bright side, ero-manga emerged and endures thanks to Icarus.

Go, vote: new shônen

Wasting no time, Deb Aoki has moved on to ask readers to pick the Best New Shônen Manga of 2009. My vote went to

It should be noted that I’m not a huge shônen fan, but I am a huge Takahashi fan, so my choice was pretty easy.

Go, vote: new shôjo

Deb Aoki has started this year’s round of best manga polls over at About.Com, asking readers to pick the Best New Shôjo Manga of 2009. My vote went to

but

came in a very, very, VERY close second.