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Spending too much on comics, then talking too much about them

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The bottom of the top

February 18, 2007 by David Welsh

At Newsarama, retailer Brian Hibbs has shared analysis of BookScan’s 2006 list of the 750 bestselling graphic novels. Hibbs notes that dollar sales for the category are up about 8.5% from 2005 estimates, and that manga publishers claimed 575 of the 750 slots. That’s about a 3% drop from last year’s manga estimate, but unit and dollar sales have both increased for the category.

There’s a significant change in methodology this year:

“This provided a very close approximation of what the year’s best sellers were, but there was always a chance that some books slipped through the cracks by not happening to sell enough copies that week to make the chart.

“This year, however, I have the actual year end chart.”

Since there’s only so much you can say about Naruto, I thought I’d look at the bottom 25 manga to see what could be gleaned.

  • CASE CLOSED V11 – 5/16/06
  • HIKARU NO GO V2 – 10/12/04
  • DRAGON BALL V5 2E – 3/??/03
  • MEGATOKYO V2 – 1/21/04
  • W JULIET V8 – 1/10/06
  • CERES CELESTIAL LEGEND V2 YUHI 2E – 2/4/04
  • SAIYUKI RELOAD V5 – 10/10/06
  • ALICE 19TH V3 CHAINED – 3/17/04
  • BEET THE VANDEL BUSTER V1 – 10/19/04
  • W JULIET V9 – 3/14/06
  • KAGETORA V1 – 3/28/06
  • ALL THAT PIKACHU ANIMANGA – 8/15/06
  • YU YU HAKUSHO V5 – 10/12/04
  • IMADOKI V3 – 10/10/04
  • KAMIKAZE KAITO JEANNE V3 – 4/26/06
  • DESCENDANTS OF DARKNESS V1 – 9/14/04
  • HANA KIMI V8 – 10/11/05
  • WOLF’S RAIN V2 – 2/1/05
  • YU YU HAKUSHO V4 — 6/16/04
  • HANA KIMI V3 – 1/11/05
  • DRAGON BALL Z V10 2E – 5/??/03
  • LA ESPERANCA V2 – 3/29/06
  • SENSUAL PHRASE V13 – 4/11/06
  • NAOKI URASAWA’S MONSTER V1 – 2/21/06
  • MAN’S BEST FRIEND INU MO ARUK – 6/??/06
  • Hm… not a whole lot, now that I look at them. There is a fair amount of evergreen material on the lower end of the scale. Less than half of the titles were actually published in 2006. Three were released in 2005, nine in 2004, and two in 2003.

    Here are some other points from the run-down that jumped out at me:

    “This year, the ‘worst selling’ book clears 4700 copies. In previous years there would be 200 or more items that didn’t have [year-to-date] sales in that amount.”

    That’s good to know, as it indicates overall growth in the category.

    “[I]t seems to me that manga, while still growing, is no longer doing so as ‘explosively’ as it once did. Nearly a 40% unit growth from ’03 to ’04, 22% from ’04 to ’05, and about 20% from ’05 to ’06. Factor in the differences in reporting methodologies, and it’s probably under 13% growth in 2006. Really, my supposition won’t be properly tested until next year’s figures, but I think we might be reaching a plateau for manga sales where the category becomes ‘mature’, and a more reasonable 5-8% growth a year is what’s to be expected.”

    Hibbs goes on to note that DC and Marvel both enjoyed massive growth in dollar sales and units moved. Both roughly doubled their numbers over 2005 estimates, though neither made tremendous gains in the number of titles placing on the list. (DC went from 42 to 59, and Marvel from 26 to 33.)

    “That’s it for ‘art comics’ – there’s no D&Q, there’s no FirstSecond (on that one I checked with a source, yup they’re all below the 4784 line; nope, not even American Born Chinese)”.

    That’s depressing. Both published some really superb books in 2006, and my anecdotal experience indicates that they each have pretty good bookstore distribution in addition to near-universal critical acclaim. Maybe some of this year’s books will show up on next year’s list.

    Filed Under: Linkblogging, Sales

    From the stack: Nextwave: Agents of H.A.T.E. Vol. 1

    February 17, 2007 by David Welsh

    I’m not quite sure how to go about reviewing Nextwave: Agents of H.A.T.E. Vol. 1 – This Is What They Want. I liked it a lot, but I’m not sure if I liked it for reasons that are entirely useful.

    It could be viewed as a super-hero satire. A motley group of C-and-lower-list Marvel characters have been duped into the service of a terrorist organization named H.A.T.E., and now they’re using the group’s marketing plan to foil H.A.T.E.’s charmingly absurd attempts at wholesale destruction. Nextwave’s fight-fire-with-fire approach is endearingly blithe, though it is informed by personal grudges and insecurities.

    The book could also be viewed as straightforward spandex comedy. I don’t think you need to known anything about the protagonists that isn’t provided on these pages to enjoy their exploits and find them grudgingly sympathetic, but I can’t be sure. The American Library Association placed it in the top ten on its Great Graphic Novels for Teens list, so that’s a reassuring indication of its accessibility to people who aren’t steeped in Marvel lore.

    And yet, a lot of what I really like about the book is based on what I know about the characters. Having always thought Monica Rambeau was an intolerable Mary Sue in her Avengers appearances, I’m delighted to see writer Warren Ellis re-imagine her as surly and resentful under the goody-goody exterior. Never fully understanding why so many writers tried to take Machine Man seriously, his portrayal here as a quirky misanthrope plays right into my perceptions of the character. So I’m unable to entirely divorce my gratitude for little gifts of revisionist snark like those from my opinion of the work as something a reader can pick up and enjoy without any background.

    I’m pretty sure casual readers can, though. It’s funny in ways that require only the most basic familiarity with super-hero tropes, like an episode of The Powerpuff Girls. (They fought broccoli monsters too, though those were from outer space.) You don’t need to have read any of the Essential Fantastic Four volumes to wonder why a giant dragon would bother to wear purple underwear.

    While I generally prefer Stuart Immonen’s softer, rounder work, seen in books like Shockrockets or Superman: Secret Identity, Nextwave looks great. There isn’t a whole lot of demand for visual nuance, what with all the explosions and murderous koalas. Immonen and inker Wade Von Grawbadger keep the emphasis on action tinged with comedy, and the mix is very successful.

    It’s surprisingly cheerful reading. Corporate terrorists are unquestionably bad, and their manufactured minions are basically cannon fodder, so any crises of conscience are neatly removed from the playing field. Nextwave can blow things up with abandon, and they can grind personal axes at the same time. They get to be proactive and cathartically violent; there’s no down side.

    As Ellis describes it in his original pitch, Netxtwave is “Healing America by beating people up.” And you know… I do feel better.

    Filed Under: From the stack, Marvel

    Wow

    February 16, 2007 by David Welsh

    I’m older than Warren Ellis. I don’t know why that shocks me so much.

    I think it’s time to come up with a new name for the blog.

    Filed Under: Uncategorized

    Check yourself

    February 15, 2007 by David Welsh

    Over at TokyoSpace, ChunHyang has a terrific essay on editing. It’s filled with great advice for anyone who’s writing for public consumption, whether the final product takes the form of a paper for a class, a weblog entry, or a script for publication. After being jarred by fairly glaring typos in the early pages of two otherwise excellent manga series that I was reading over the weekend, praise for editing is reassuring reading. (And yes, I should practice her suggestions more often than I do.)

    In related news, Netcomics is hiring a full-time proofreader.

    Filed Under: Linkblogging

    Mangazon

    February 15, 2007 by David Welsh

    Yet Another Comic Blog’s Dave Carter recently took a look at the 50 best-selling graphic novels at Amazon, so I thought I might take a look at the manga category (which update hourly like all of Amazon’s best-seller lists, so what’s there now might not track with the titles listed below).

    1. Making Comics: Storytelling Secrets of Comics, Manga and Graphic Novels 2. Death Note Vol. 6 (Viz)
    3. Target in the Finder Vol. 1 (CPM)
    4. Bleach Vol. 17 (Viz)
    5. Absolute Boyfriend Vol. 3 (Viz)
    6. Death Note Vol. 9 (Viz)
    7. Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories 2 (Tokyopop)
    8. Fruits Basket Vol. 15 (Tokyopop)
    9. Virtuoso Di Amore (DramaQueen)
    10. How to Draw Cartoons for Comic Strips
    11. Our Kingdom Vol. 5 (Juné)
    12. Fake Vol. 5 (Tokyopop)
    13. Lies and Kisses (DramaQueen)
    14. Vampire Knight Vol. 1 (Viz)
    15. Gorgeous Carat Vol. 4 (Blu)
    16. Loveless Vol. 4 (Tokyopop)
    17. Death Note Vol. 1 (Viz)
    18. Death Note Vol. 5 (Viz)
    19. The All-New Tenchi Muyô Vol. 2: Doom Time (Viz)
    20. Naruto Vol. 2 (Viz)
    21. Negima! Vol. 7 (Del Rey)
    22. Yotsuba&! Vol. 1 (ADV)
    23. Gravitation Ex 1 (Tokyopop)
    24. Hana-Kimi Vol. 16 (Viz)
    25. Death Note Vol. 4 (Viz)
    26. Ai Yori Aoshi Vol. 15 (Tokyopop)
    27. Naruto Vol. 1 (Viz)
    28. Naruto Vol. 3 (Viz)
    29. Kizuna: Bonds of Love Vol. 7 (Be Beautiful)
    30. Naruto Vol. 4 (Viz)
    31. Junjo Romantica 2 (Blu)
    32. Fruits Basket Vol. 2 (Tokyopop)
    33. Blade of the Immortal Vol. 16: Shortcut (Dark Horse)
    34. Death Note Vol. 8 (Viz)
    35. Negima! Vol. 6 (Del Rey)
    36. Death Note Vol. 7 (Viz)
    37. Berserk Vol. 14 (Dark Horse/DMP)
    38. Death Note Vol. 3 (Viz)
    39. Gravitation Vol. 10 (Tokyopop)
    40. Naruto Vol. 12 (Viz)
    41. Air Gear 1 (Del Rey)
    42. How to Draw Cartoon Animals
    43. Kare Kano: His and Her Circumstances Vol. 21 (Tokyopop)
    44. Bleach Vol. 10 (Viz)
    45. Fruits Basket Vol. 3 (Tokyopop)
    46. 100 Bullets: Decayed (Vertigo)
    47. Dragon Hunt (Warcraft: The Sunwell Trilogy Book 1) (Tokyopop)
    48. Shadows of Ice (Warcraft: The Sunwell Trilogy Book 2) (Tokyopop)
    49. Naruto Vol. 5 (Viz)
    50. Return to Labyrinth 1 (Tokyopop)

    Now, Amazon is having one of its 4-for-the-price-of-3 manga sales, and a number of the titles on the list overlap, particularly ones on the first page of listings. But a lot of those titles are also perennial sellers, so maybe it’s some combination of popularity and irregular discounting. So this snapshot is probably somewhat skewed.

    The list actually reminds me in an odd way of the top 50 manga lists from Diamond. A mix of traditionally strong sellers, a fair sprinkling of yaoi, and the occasional oddity, excluding the oddities that result from Amazon’s sorting system.

    Filed Under: On-line shopping, Sales

    Speculation

    February 15, 2007 by David Welsh

    I got an intriguing press release from Go! Comi in the e-mailbox yesterday:

    WENDY PINI TO APPEAR AT GO! COMI PANEL

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    Legendary comic creator Wendy Pini (“ElfQuest”) will be appearing at manga publisher Go! Comi’s panel at New York Comic Con to announce a major new project, which she describes as “darkly exciting and adult oriented.” The panel will be held at 2:00 PM on Saturday, February 24th. Wendy will be joined by her husband, Richard Pini, for an autograph session at Go! Comi’s booth (#564) at 3:00 PM immediately after the panel.

    In light of Go! Comi’s previous announcement that they’ll be conducting portfolio reviews at NYCC, it seems increasingly likely that someone’s thinking about branching out.

    Filed Under: Conventions, Go! Comi, Press releases

    Skating by

    February 14, 2007 by David Welsh

    Okay, the terror of freezing rain followed by sleet followed by snow has renewed my interest in this week’s comics, perhaps because weather might keep them from arriving. I’m fickle and, though it seems contradictory, a creature of habit. Sue me.

    Praise from virtually all quarters has rendered the Nextwave: Agents of Hate trade paperback (Marvel) irresistible. I surrender.

    The week basically belongs to Viz, though, with new volumes of The Drifting Classroom, Monster, Train Man: Densha Otoko, and the debut of Inubaka: Crazy for Dogs, for anyone who’s still riding a cute-dog buzz from Westminster. (I can’t believe there isn’t a show-dog name generator somewhere out there on the web.)

    And while Del Rey doesn’t have any releases on the schedule, there’s a sprightly round of recommendations in comments on this MangaBlog entry. It was the final kick in the pants I needed to order a copy of Mushishi.

    Filed Under: ComicList, Del Rey, Linkblogging, Marvel, Viz

    Sex, politics and religion

    February 13, 2007 by David Welsh

    Not necessarily in that order.

    *

    ICv2 weighs in on those anime-styled DC heroine figurines:

    “DC Direct’s attempt to create something akin to the sexy anime/manga figures so common in Japan has already stirred up some controversy and is likely to run further afoul of the puritanical streak in the American character. It should be interesting to see how far down the ‘fan service’ road DC Direct or other American companies will go — how long will it take before there is an American superheroine action figure with squeeze-able silicon breasts or panty-shot purveying mirrored bases (see ‘Yamato’s Ikki Tousen: Battle Sonsaku’)?”

    *

    I was hoping that if I waited long enough, someone would write a review of Kevin Huizenga’s marvelous Curses (Drawn & Quarterly) that I could just point to and claim, “I was just about to say exactly the same thing!” Procrastination pays, thanks to Dirk Deppey.

    *

    It’s not that this week’s ComicList is especially boring. It’s just that I’m feeling exceptionally lazy and disappointed. Television has been promising me apocalyptic levels of snowfall for half a week, and while I knew in some small corner of my mind that I would be disappointed, I still expended most of my anticipatory energy on the prospect of a blizzard that never was.

    Okay, I am a little excited about the prospect of more tawdry Borgia action from Heavy Metal, because it was like an uncensored Renaissance version of Dynasty. Jog explains it better than I can.

    *

    At Blog@Newsarama, Graeme McMillan wonders if Serenity really sells all that well. It’s never shown up in the BookScan charts to my knowledge, but I’ve never been entirely clear on how those are assembled to begin with. Do they factor in sales in Christian bookstores and other specialty shops of that nature? It’s possible that RealBuzz has moved a whole pile of inspirational manga through those venues.

    *

    And just to cleanse the palate, Simon (NSFW) Jones thoughtfully filters out the ero-manga offerings in the March edition of Previews Adult. Equal time, people.

    Filed Under: Linkblogging

    Monday linkblogging

    February 12, 2007 by David Welsh

    A comics retailer and a librarian walk into a bar… This piece from halifax_slasher and this response from Robin Brenner make for great back-to-back reading. (Oh, and No Flying, No Tights has also completed a mammoth update.)

    *

    From the “I agree!” category, thoughts on Wild Adapter from TangognaT:

    “If you like reading stories about cool men who might or might not have romantic feelings for each other smoking cigarettes and shooting guns, you can’t go wrong with Wild Adapter.”

    And on 12 Days from Lyle at Crocodile Caucus:

    “Considering the amount of skill [June] Kim shows, I’m surprised that there wasn’t a small but loyal audience eagerly awaiting this book on the basis of Kim’s short stories (similar to how many people purchased The Baby Sitters’ Club off of the strength of Raina Tegemeier’s mini-comic work). Much like Telgemeier, Kim is an artist who’s storytelling skill suggest years of honing her craft under the radar. I know I’m sold on whatever project Kim creates next.”

    *

    From the “Grab your pointers” category:

    Dave Carter at Yet Another Comics Blog is looking for good sources of manga news. In addition’s to the ones already suggested in the comments, I’d add the always-interesting ComiPress and the weekly round-ups from ChunHyang.

    Joe Gross at Austin360.com is looking for manga recommendations. (Found via The Comics Reporter.) He already seems to be making a pretty good start with books like Eden, Monster, and The Drifting Classroom.

    *

    Kevin Melrose has re-launched Comics, Covered. The more Melrose the better, I say.

    *

    And this week’s Flipped is up, celebrating the recuperative power of fluff.

    Filed Under: Flipped, Linkblogging

    From the stack: The Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Service Vol. 2

    February 12, 2007 by David Welsh

    I capped off the weekend’s manga read-a-thon with the second volume of Eiji Otsuka and Housui Yamazaki’s The Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Service and liked it even better than the first. Otsuka and Yamazaki set aside the episodic structure for a single story that consumes the entire volume, and while I really enjoyed the short-story structure of the debut, the change is tremendously successful.

    The story starts with the execution of a convicted murderer and spirals out into a number of unexpected, entirely satisfying directions. Without giving anything away, things become extremely personal for some of the Kurosagi sleuths. That’s not a direction I generally enjoy in mysteries and thrillers, but Otsuka uses it exceptionally well here.

    Beyond the added layers of personal resonance for the characters, it’s also an extremely well-constructed mystery. Otsuka plays fair with the mechanics of the story while carefully emphasizing the moral ambiguities of the scenario. The long-form story coalesces gradually, asking as many questions as it answers along the way while providing some appropriately gruesome moments of suspense.

    The peril and complexity of the scenario doesn’t lead Otsuka to neglect the quirky charms of his core cast. They’ve got more on their minds, but it doesn’t fundamentally change who they are. It just deepens readers’ understanding of them.

    It’s great stuff. Mystery fans looking for a polished, substantial graphic novel would really be doing themselves a favor by picking it up.

    Filed Under: Dark Horse, From the stack

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