Do you have what it takes to collect the clues, chase the leads, and get to the bottom of all the mysterious crimes happening across some amazing Kodansha manga? Now’s your chance to test your mettle, during our Crime & Mystery Digital Manga Sale!
The game is afoot, dear reader! As you can now save up to 50% off such nefarious series as the supernatural undead detective story Undead Girl Murder Farce. If thought provoking mysteries are more your speed, check out A School Frozen in Time – with art by Your Lie in April mangaka, Naoshi Arakawa! If you’re looking for an all baddie thriller, check out the body horror suspense manga, Kasane. You can even try the anime-inspiring fan-favorite manga BAKEMONOGATARI! All this and more at a price that won’t make all your money mysteriously gone.
Curious about this sale but want to see more? Check out below to read the FREE 1st chapter of our featured series, Undead Girl Murder Farce. Or click on any of the titles featured below to read their free 1st chapter preview.
Follow the clues, solve the case:Discover True Detectives
All the fun of Black Friday with none of the pushing and shoving!
We know your wallet might already be strained by all the crazy deals all over the internet BUT how many of them will open your eyes vast manga universes for just .99¢ a pop? Can’t think of one? Well we’re just THAT deal! Right now until Monday, November 30th, you can indulge in nearly 30 series ranging from sci-fi landscapes like in Battle Angel Alita, BLAME! and EDENS ZERO, to magical realms like FAIRY TAIL, The Seven Deadly Sins, and To Your Eternity, and the even love-filled corridors of romance series like in Domestic Girlfriend, Motekiand O’ Maidens in Your Savage Season– each one, only .99¢ for volume 1s.
It’s a deal that won’t last long but, also won’t burden your wallet! Just visit one of our participating digital vendors to start any (or ALL) of these amazing series for just 99¢ each!: Bookwalker, comiXology, Google Play, Kindle, Nook and izneo. Sale runs from November 25 – 30th!
~(Not Just) Black Friday Digital Manga Sale ~ November 25 – 30th See below for the full list of titles being offered during this sale, and click on the links below to read chapter 1s FREE!
Are you a fan of reading digital manga, AND do you use comiXology or Kindle to fulfill your manga desires? Have we got a deal for you! For a limited time we’re offering comiXology & Kindle readers up to 50% off select titles, so you can add to or start building your digital library!
Take advantage of this exclusive comiXology & Kindle sale while you can! Sale runs from June 16, until June 22!
Like what you see but think you want even more digital manga? Check out the exclusive deals also happening at BookWalker!
~ ComiXology & Kindle Exclusive: Kodansha Comics & VERTICAL Digital Manga Showcase! ~ June 16 – 22 See below for the full list of titles being offered during this sale, and click on the links below to read chapter 1s FREE!
Have you ever held a secret in your heart? One so deep it was almost like it was being held by another you? You’re not alone! Whether it’s heroes or villains, all the protagonists in the Double Life Digital Manga Sale lead dual lives that force them to keep secrets – sometimes for good and sometimes for EVIL! Now you can follow the secret lives of heroes struggling to keep their powers hidden like in Gleipnir or Inuyashiki, lovers looking to keep their crushes and interests quiet like in Lovesick Ellie or Wotakoi: Love Is Hard for Otaku, and even a villain or two trying to keep from getting caught like in Kasane. So many kinds of secrets can be revealed to you now at an amazing price!
Take up to 50% off all volume of the series listed below by visiting our participating digital partners: BookWalker, comiXology, Google Play, Kindle, MyAnimeList, and nook. Sale runs from March 17, until March 23.
~ Double Life Digital Manga Sale! ~ March 17-23 Click on the featured titles for more info or to read Chapter 1s FREE!
…or as you humans might say, Cyber Monday Sale! All your favorite manga featuring human-machine hybrids up to 50% off! It’s almost enough to make a robot emotional!
This week only, over 15 series of our cyborg-themed series are now up to 50% off at our digital retail partners: BookWalker, comiXology, Google Play, Kindle, MyAnimeList, and nook. Rev your motors, though, sale ends December 2nd!
~ Kodansha Comics Cyber Monday Sale ~ November 26- December 2 Click on the featured titles to read Chapter 1 for FREE!
Y’know, lately it may only seem like the end of the world, but it is certainly time … to find your favorite manga version of the apocalypse by browsing this destructive catalog of catastrophic comics!
This week, 20+ ofour digital apocalyptic manga series are up to 50% off at our online retail partners: BookWalker, comiXology, Google Play, Kindle, MyAnimeList, and nook! But take heed … the sale, if not the world, ends November 18!
~ Kodansha Comics Post-Apocalypse Sale ~ November 12-18 Click on the featured titles to read Chapter 1 for FREE!
Too hot to go out and do anything? Best buckle down with aircon blasting, an ice-cold drink, and an entire series of manga to read! This week, we’re hosting our first-ever Binge-Reading Sale featuring 30+ completed manga series—putting them up for a huge discount at our digital retail partners: BookWalker, comiXology, Google Play, Kindle, and nook.
Here’s the deal
Wanna try something new? Digital Volumes 1’s of select completed manga series are only 99¢ ($1.99 for omnibus volumes)!
If you like what you’re reading, keep goin’—becauseall the other volumes are up to50% off!
Pretty sweet deal huh? But you gotta hurry, because the sale will end on July 29!
Here’s a few recommendations!
Wow! Big-time 2019 Eisner Award winner for “Best U.S. Edition of International Material—Asia” (just announced at San Diego Comic-Con!), Akiko Higashimura’s Tokyo Tarareba Girls, leads off our Binge-Reading Sale!
And here’s the complete lineup!
~ Kodansha Comics Binge-Reading Sale ~ July 23-29
Click on the link to read Chapter 1 for FREE!
So in case ya haven’t heard, Kodansha Comics just added a 100+ series to comiXology Unlimited and Kindle Unlimited, which means subscribers to either “unlimited” digital platform can now dive in and explore our vast library of manga—including titles like Attack on Titan, Battle Angel Alita, Fairy Tail, and a whole a lot more!
And to help get you even deeper into those awesome stories on comiXology Unlimited and Kindle Unlimited, this week, we’re putting all graphic-novel volumes of those 100+ series for sale up to 50% off exclusively on comiXology and Kindle. So if you find your new favorite new manga series on CU or KU, you can get the remaining volumes at a deep discount during this sale (which ends on May 20) and keep reading!
So what series will you find on Unlimited? See this list, below …
~ Kodansha Comics x ComiXology Unlimited Sale ~ May 14~20 Click on the title to read Chapter 1 for FREE!
10 years of Kodansha Comics! The year 2019 marks the 10th anniversary of the first Kodansha Comics manga published in English. Please join us in celebration as we select one classic Kodansha Comics series each month for exclusive content, promotions, and other surprises!
A Silent VoiceVolumes 1-7 are available now from Kodansha Comics in a beautiful complete collector’s-edition box set for old and new fans alike!
April Spotlight: A Silent Voice
Our April Spotlight title is Yoshitoki Oima’s moving coming-of-age manga A Silent Voice, and with the release of the A Silent Voice movie now out on Bluray and DVD, it couldn’t be better timing to celebrate this Eisner-nominated series! So what kind of “special surprises” do we have waiting for you this month? Check these out …
Surprise 1: Exclusive A Silent Voice pin! As a part of the 10 Years of Kodansha Comics project, we’ve teamed up with our friends at Rightstuf to bring you these awesome exclusiveA Silent Voice pins! Visit Rightstuf and order any volume of A Silent Voice or the A Silent Voice Complete Series Box Set and you’ll receive an exclusive A Silent Voice pin for FREE! Available this month (April 2019) only or while supplies last.
All you have to do is take this survey by April 30 to enter for a chance to win.
Surprise 3: Yoshitoki Oima long interview excerpt
Kodansha Comics is also proud to present a special interview with Yoshitoki Oima! First appearing in the A Silent Voice Fanbook (Japan only), this interview with A Silent Voice creator Yoshitoki Oima has never before been translated into English … until now!
About Yoshitoki Oima
Yoshitoki Oima won the 80thWeekly Shonen Magazine Rookie Manga Prize, and debuted in 2009 with Mardock Scramble. FollowingA Silent Voice, her new series, To Your Eternity, began serializing inWeekly Shonen Magazine at the end of 2016.
Really See, Really Hear: A Silent Voice Yoshitoki Oima Long Interview
An excerpt from the interview first published in the A Silent Voice Fanbook (September 2016)
A Theme of Communication
Q. A Silent Voice deals with a lot of very serious themes, including bullying and hearing impairment. The series comes across as a very brave act. Do you feel that way?
Yoshitoki Oima (YO): I’m a little uncomfortable reducing the work to simplistic statements like “It’s about bullying.” Personally, I never saw the series as being “about” bullying or hearing impairment; instead, I was attempting to illustrate, literally, how difficult it can be for people to communicate their feelings to each other. So while the title may be A Silent Voice, I very much intended to depict communication as a whole. Shoko can’t hear, that’s true, but that’s really just one of the things that makes her who she is; and in the same way, the bullying in this series is one result of a particular kind of communication. Q. Is there something specific that motivated you to take on communication, and the difficulty of communicating feelings, as your theme?
YO: A Silent Voice actually draws a lot from my own experience: the regret over my failure to take notice of and listen to the voice of one girl in particular; it deeply influenced Shoya’s commitment to “really see, really listen.” It’s not that my friend couldn’t hear, but in this story, Shoko’s inability to hear is partially a nudge to help readers key in to the main theme. It wasn’t intended to be the core of the series, per se.
Q. It’s true that Shoya never once uses the word “bullying” to describe his own actions.
YO: Shoya is all too aware how it would sound if he described his past behavior toward Shoko as “bullying,” so he strongly resists using that word and labeling it that way.
In contrast, the people around him, including Miki, Naoka, and Mr. Takeuchi, are perfectly happy calling it “bullying”. That compartmentalizes the bullying, and sort of lets them feel that they weren’t involved. That’s a relief for them, and they find “bullying” a very convenient term as they create their own narratives of themselves.
Q. Miki and Naoka sometimes use the word “karma” to describe the events of the series. Is this something else they say simply because it’s convenient for them, like “bullying”?
YO: “Karma” is a word the characters use as an easy dodge. They’re trying to live their own lives, and “karma” is a box they can compartmentalize things in to help make sense of them. For me personally, “karma” is not a significant factor in the series.
It’s possible one reason people focus so much on the word “karma” is that it gives readers a certain sense of relief, too. Words like “karma,” or phrases like “crime and punishment” and “good is rewarded; evil is punished,” are frameworks that lend themselves very well to stories. Some readers might expect characters who do something wrong to be punished, but I wasn’t specifically thinking about that during the writing.
I do want to be clear about one thing, though: I didn’t write Miki, or even Mr. Takeuchi or Shoko’s paternal family, to be “villains.”
Q. Do you mean they’re each right in their own way – or at least have their own feelings about all this?
YO: I drew each scene with empathy for the character in question—like how Mr. Takeuchi acts in the elementary school, and when Shoko’s paternal grandfather says, “We don’t want anyone like that in our family” (vol 4, ch. 32: Gum Syrup). These characters all realize that “If I say something like this, I might come off as a bad person.” But they all say these things convinced that “raising a child with disabilities isn’t as simple as you think.”
While each character says these things in their own way, the words they speak and the attitudes they exhibit spring from brutally honest feelings they can’t deny. These are things I might have even said myself if I were ignorant of people with disabilities. For example, when faced with serious issues and cornered to make a decision, maybe I would’ve also said something like, “This may be taboo, but I’m going to speak my mind.”
Of course, it’s up to each individual to think about what’s good and bad, and that is what Shoko’s mother found troubling.
Shoko’s Feelings, Conveyed in the Communication Notebook Q. The communication notebook plays a crucial role in the meeting, conflict, and finally reunion between Shoya and Shoko.
YO: With her grandmother, Shoko practiced speaking aloud; she was making an effort to use her voice to talk. But when she stopped speaking, that notebook became her one line of communication with hearing people.
Q. Why does Shoko stop talking?
YO: It has a lot to do with her mother and Yuzuru. It made Shoko unbearably sad to see Yuzuru getting bullied because Shoko couldn’t speak like everyone else; that’s the first reason. The second reason was that her mother wanted Shoko to be able to speak well, but when things don’t go as smoothly as planned, her mother becomes frustrated—Shoko picks up on that. So she slowly stops using her voice.
The message Shoko displays in the notebook when she transfers to Suimon Elementary School—“I would like to get to know everyone through this notebook”—really says it all. For her, the communication notebook isn’t just the one tool that allows her to communicate; it’s a symbol of Shoko’s hope that she can be friends with her classmates.
Q. But some pretty cruel things end up written in that notebook.
YO: Shoko starts out being able to converse normally with everyone through the notebook, but gradually all the notes turn to complaints, and then to outright meanness. Shoko sees all this as her own fault, so—as a means of self-defense and to smooth things over with everyone else—she hides how she really feels and just starts to apologize all the time. It culminates in Shoya throwing the notebook into the pond, and even though she immediately rushes to fish it out again, Shoko herself decides to throw the notebook away immediately afterward. It was her only haven, and now she’s abandoning it: she’s given up on communicating. This encounter with Shoya is the last straw; Shoko can no longer hold back all the feelings she’s been keeping inside, and confesses to Yuzuru that she wants to die. The notebook was just that important to her.
How can everyone write such awful things in this precious notebook of hers? It’s because nobody can see how important it is—not even her mother. That’s why her mother can throw it off the bridge like she does. I gave that chapter the title “I Gave Up Once Before” because it answers the question “What did Shoko give up in elementary school?” When, in high school, Shoya suddenly shows up with the notebook Shoko thought she’d abandoned, to her it’s much more than just an old notebook. It’s as if Shoya has brought back with him the whole hope of being friends with everyone that Shoko had thrown away in elementary school—friends she was going to make with that notebook.
When Shoya asks, “Is that notebook really that important?”, Shoko responds, “It matters because you brought it back to me.” She clasps it to her chest with one hand over the other, letting him know how precious it is.
Q. Shoya pulled the communication notebook out of the pond and kept it all that time. Does that show that, on some level, he had a sense of how much it meant to Shoko?
YO: Having experienced bullying himself, Shoya can look at the notebook and realize what awful things everyone wrote there. But at the same time, he sees how Shoko never wrote anything but “I’m sorry, I’m sorry.” He starts to ask himself, why would she throw away something that mattered so much to her? And he starts to wonder: was there more she wanted to say? That’s why he held onto it for so long.
Q. So when Shoya hits Shoko, that’s because he thinks she ought to be more open about herself, right?
YO: The way Shoko only ever wrote “I’m sorry” in the notebook gnaws at Shoya. He wanted to bring out—maybe you could call it—Shoko’s true self. He wanted to know how she really felt.
Spaceships … time travel … mobile suits … and aliens! Are you a … true science-fiction head? Or just inspired by Battle Angel Alita? Whatever the case may be, Kodansha Comics has lots of cool science-fiction manga on offer, and to showcase our recent hits like EDENS ZERO—a new space-fantasy series by none other than Fairy Tail‘s Hiro Mashima—and timeless classics like The Ghost in the Shell and Parasyte, this week we’re hosting the Science-Fiction & Beyond Sale where all volumes of 30+ manga series are up to 50% off at our digital retail partners: BookWalker, comiXology, Google Play, Kindle, and nook. (Sale ends March 4.)
~ Science-Fiction & Beyond Sale ~ February 26-March 4 Click on the link to read Chapter 1 for FREE!