Anime News Network’s Summer Manga Reading List – This Week in Anime

Chris and Coop searched their shelves for your next manga beach read!
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed by the participants in this chatlog are not the views of Anime News Network.
Spoiler Warning for discussion of the series ahead.
School’s out for summer, Chris! With folks of all ages out and about, and looking for something to do, it’s the perfect time to revisit a classic library pastime—the summer reading list!
© American Manga Awards
And while the recently announced American Manga Awards nominees already make for a solid stack of books to work through, I’m sure we’ve got more than a few titles of our own to recommend! Be they the ideal summer longread for younger audiences or tales of hot and sweaty affairs for mature readers.
That’s “hot and sweaty” metaphorically, Coop. I’ll be damned if I leave my air conditioning in this summer heat. You’re right that there’s a whole lot of reading material to recommend while iceboxinging it in here, wrapped up another round of contributing to the Manga Guide last season, so I’ve a few of those titles bouncing around in my head still. Plus the others just did that great run-down on queer manga recommendations, so we might as well keep the reading rainbow going with a broader selection. We’ll probably be including some queer titles in our picks as well, because we are us.

© Hayate Kuku 2023
Translation: I just finished an advance review copy of BLACK BLOOD and I still want to gush about this hot cyborg man and his cute boyfriend a little.

© 2004 Naoki URASAWA/Studio Nuts, Takashi NAGASAKI, Tezuka Productions, Original Japanese edition published by SHOGAKUKAN Stack
You’ve always needed to include some award-winning classics on your summer assignments.


© 76 OA / ©96-25 A
Maybe this can work like the backlog-clearing Christmas gifts we give on the other seasonal side of this column. Reading puts the ‘fun’ in ‘fundamental’ when it’s not a homework assignment, after all. Still, I must at least motivate myself to catch up on some of my faves that have anime versions coming in another season or two. Case in point: Young Ladies Don’t Play Fighting Games.

© Eri Ejima 2022
It’s a fantastic series about a personal favorite subject matter that I’m shamefully several volumes behind in.

© Eri Ejima 2022
More than that, I’m hoping the Young Ladies‘ anime version can capture this manga’s unhinged energy. It’s very much in the same spirit as the recent Rock is a Lady’s Modesty, and I for one am overjoyed that “private school girls doing unfitting activities in inglamorous ways” is an emergent genre.
I’m curious to see how the specifics of the anime’s production morph the original work. To quote the great Masao Maruyama from our recent interview, “If anyone has a deep love for a certain manga and wants to see the same thing on-screen, they would be better off by just reading it.” For me, an adaptation’s conversation with the source material often makes both works way more memorable.
Which brings me to Chiho Saitō‘s manga version of Revolutionary Girl Utena.


© Sotsu, Sunrise

© Sotsu, Sunrise
As you can probably tell from the lengthy conversation I had with Steve earlier this year, I love the original anime series and the drama that’s hidden within the darkest corners of Ohtori Academy. Compared to the series, the manga is more of a buttoned-up affair. While both generally follow the same beats (especially in the manga adaptation of Adolescence of Utena), there’s just enough difference between these versions that I feel that there’s an intentional degree of cross-textual conversation going on, which was probably intentional on the part of Chiho Saitō, Kunihiko Ikuhara, and the other members of Be-PaPas.

© 1997 Chiho SAITO, Be-PaPas/SHOGAKUKAN
The recent anniversary manga, After the Revolution, feels like the big convergence point of this conversation, pulling at elements of every Utena project to reflect on the series’ legacy. It’s not the anime, but Saito’s manga is filled with gorgeous art and plenty of food for thought if you’re all in on Utena. VIZ recently re-released their immaculately premium Utena manga box set, which I heard was incredibly hard to come by until this reprint. Like Kodansha USA‘s Tomorrow’s Joe release, it’s one of the nicest sets I’ve had the privilege of owning… And it comes with some lesbians to throw up on your wall if so desired.

© 1997 Chiho SAITO, Be-PaPas/SHOGAKUKAN

© Project SYMPHOGEAR
Seriously, though, I like it when time and interest allow publishers to put out seriously stacked versions of seminal works like that. It puts me in the mind of Kodansha‘s big “Complete Collector’s Editions” of A Silent Voice from a few years back. All luxurious hard binding with glossy pages and bonus interviews, these were a real treat.

© 2013-2014 Yoshitoki Oima

© Yoshikazu Yasuhiko/Kadokawa Shoten
In case you needed some more GQuuuuuuX reading to do.

© 2004 by LUCKY LAND COMMUNICATIONS, All rights reserved.
Speaking of alternate-universe shenanigans.
You could say it’s a new “spin” on an old favorite, right?

© 2004 by LUCKY LAND COMMUNICATIONS, All rights reserved.
Steel Ball Run had been built up a lot for me by fellow JoJo fans over the years, with some caveats that it allegedly took a bit to get going. Concerning those expert opinions, I’m not sure what they’re talking about, since this horse race hits the ground running as far as I’m concerned.

© 2004 by LUCKY LAND COMMUNICATIONS, All rights reserved.
It’s very “back to basics” for JoJo in the sense of “What if Hirohiko Araki had written something in the space of the first couple parts with all the knowledge and experience he built up over the last six entries?” The result is already a wild ride with some really interesting dual-protagonist synergy between Gyro and Johnny.
With most of Araki’s odd magnum opus officially available in English, I can’t think of a better series to load up on at the library. If I were still in college or high school, I could see my entire summer being consumed by a marathon read of the entire JoJo saga.

© 2004 by LUCKY LAND COMMUNICATIONS, All rights reserved.
I have a confession to make, Chris. I lied about JoJo being the series to load up on for a marathon read. It’s actually this little manga by this guy from Kagoshima. I think his name is Takehiko Inoue?

© 1990 – 2013 Takehiko Inoue and I.T. Planning, Inc.

© 1990 – 2013 Takehiko Inoue and I.T. Planning, Inc.
Throughout thirty-one volumes, this seemingly simple story about a punk who joins the school basketball team to win a girl’s heart evolves into a passionate love letter to the sport itself. Slam Dunk isn’t afraid to dive deep into what makes shooting hoops such a key part of the cast’s lives—even if they’re not wearing a Shohoku jersey. I’m generally not much for sports, but the passion presented on every page won me over so quickly.

© 1990 – 2013 Takehiko Inoue and I.T. Planning, Inc.

© 1990 – 2013 Takehiko Inoue and I.T. Planning, Inc.
It’s a similar ride to Araki’s art in JoJo as we mentioned, and a reason why long read-throughs like these are a perfect way to while away the summer days!

© Kawada, Shueisha
Kawada‘s tale of a reluctant MMA fighter was unfortunately canceled just four volumes into its run, which was too bad on account of how much promise it was showing. Appropriately for the sport, the hits in this series look like they hurt! And there’s underlying family drama powering the whole arc that I feel really would have been served well had it gotten to go for more rounds. It’s also got the character Nao Okiba, who I like for…
![]() © Kawada, Shueisha |
![]() © Kawada, Shueisha |
![]() © Kawada, Shueisha |
![]() © Kawada, Shueisha |
…reasons.

© Moare Ohta/KODANSHA LTD.
But on that note, it is interesting how both MMA series seemed to hit a snag just as they were about to hit the next level. It makes me wonder if MMA is prone to a specific form of sports manga curse in Japan…
To cater to that, I will bring some prestige to my offerings and stay sports-adjacent as well. The English release of Shin’ichi Sakamoto‘s The Climber is coming out. It’s not quite on the level of polish as the inimitable Innocent or #DRCL, but Academia encourages checking out authors’ earlier, formative works as well.

© KOKOH NO HITO © 2007, 2008 by Shin-ichi Sakamoto, Yoshio Nabeta, Hiroshi Takano, Jiro Natta
Sakamoto’s body of work is a blind spot of mine that I should probably rectify soon. Cue our editor hurriedly messaging me, “COOP, YOU’VE GOTTA READ EVERYTHING HE’S MADE!”

© 2021 by Shin-ichi Sakamoto All rights reserved.

© 2021 by Shin-ichi Sakamoto All rights reserved.
Sakamoto’s output is so storied that I’d recommend any of his manga currently available in English for your summer reading. Innocent in particular is a great pick when any time is a perfect time for révolution.

© 2013, 2023 Shin-ichi Sakamoto
It all gets intense, with a boatload of content warnings in some places, but there’s nothing else like it. There’s a reason my response was “Where has this been all my life?” when I stumbled into Sakamoto’s stuff a couple of years ago.
Speaking of another artist, Archipel spoke with, the next recommendation on my list is Yuriko Akase‘s Sazan & Comet Girl. Released in a single omnibus by Seven Seas, the title follows the titular duo as they embark on a galaxy-spanning adventure filled with romance, mystery, and plenty of heart! And it’s fully painted in watercolor.

© Yuriko Akase 2018
This looks lovely, you have my attention!

© Yuriko Akase 2018

© Mokumokuren 2022, KADOKAWA CORPORATION

© Inuhiko Doronoda/KODANSHA LTD.
See, I’m fair, I’m giving reading assingments to myself!

© Inuhiko Doronoda/KODANSHA LTD.

© Inuhiko Doronoda/KODANSHA LTD.
Granted, the power of prestige makes for one solid side of recommendations, but you gotta have stuff that appeals to the baser side of things. So I’ll start to wrap things up by bringing back that BLACK BLOOD book I mentioned at the start. Because sometimes your sex ed reading assignment should also include hot cyborg sex.

© Hayate Kuku 2023
This one’s not out at the time of writing this column, but will be by the end of the month.
Sometimes you look that robot man in the eye and say, “I’ll be your red comet, baby.”

© 2022 Loving Living VR. Mushoku na Ore no BL (Babinikus Love) ©2021 by Yoikono tt (Seikatsu Sesshishou)
See, I told you I’d get around to our own coda to the queer manga column eventually.
That we did! However, my suggestion from the Irodori bunch is a tad more vanilla by comparison. Alp’s Like a Doujin is a hot and steamy exploration of when a pair of nerds suddenly become way more than just buddies who shoot the breeze over the latest anime or manga. It’s smutty, yes, but what relationship isn’t after a while? It’s that level of relatability that made it stick out for me.

© Nico Nicholson 2022

© 2001 STUDIO ORPHEE / Aniplex
Happy reading!
Coop’s Summer Manga Reading List
Chris’ Summer Manga Reading List
- Young Ladies Don’t Play Fighting Games by Eri Ejima (Seven Seas)
- JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure Part 7: Steel Ball Run by Hirohiko Araki (Viz Media)
- Martial Master Asumi by Kawada (Viz Media)
- The Climber by Shin’ichi Sakamoto (Viz Media)—or anything from Sakamoto
- The Summer Hikaru Died by Mokumokuren (Yen Press)
- Spacewalking With You by Inuhiko Doronoda (Kodansha)
- BLACK BLOOD by Hayate Kuku (Seven Seas)