The Yuukos
Aug. 8th, 2008 01:55 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Lately there seem to be a lot of the "mysterious shop owner/deal maker with ties to the supernatural" manga coming out. Even though Pet Shop of Horrors predates it by quite a bit, I kind of think xxxHolic's popularity contributes a lot to how many are being licensed. It also tends to naturally cause people to gravitate towards thinking the other books are ripoffs. I think it's a natural assumption, btw, even if it's an incorrect one, not only because Petshop of Horrors was never-as far as I know-as big as xxxHolic, but also because the licensing filters awareness of other books in the genre(s), and can skew our perception of when things came out. For example, Yumekui Kenbun Nightmare Inspector is on (I think) vol 2 in the US, and has both visual and thematic elements in common with xxxHolic, which just had vol 12 come out in the US. In original publication, however, xxxHolic came out a year or two later. (I looked it up earlier this week, but am too lazy to go check the exact period of time between publication now.)
Anyway, I'm curious. What all books have come out in the genre in the US? (And i mean as the prominent theme. Urahara in Bleach and-I understand-Kou in Wild Adaptor are of the character and thematic type, though Urahara is eventually more of a cog in the megaplot, but they and their shops aren't the focus of their individual series.)
Off the top of my head, there's:
Antique Gift Shop
Fairy Cube*
Hell Girl**
Legal Drug***
Nightmares for Sale
Petshop of Horrors
Petshop of Horrors: Tokyo
Tarot Cafe
xxxHolic
Yumekui Kenbun Nightmare Inspector
*I'm on the fence regarding this one, actually. On the one hand, Kaito's shop and his plotty stuff is pretty central to the plot, but on the other, it isn't the focus. Hm...Probably shouldn't count it, but it could still end up revolving around that later on. Probationary status, maybe?
**I'm counting the website, as people specifically go there to acquire her services. Pretty much applying the idea as a whole to modern tech, instead of the "small shop" nostalgia.
***At least, as I understand it-this one I haven't read yet.
Anyone have any others? (I swear I'm forgetting at least one I read/have read.)
Or, for that matter, thoughts on the genre in general? I tend to automatically grab the books when I see them, but I can't quite pin down why I love the genre so much.
And if you know of others, can you mention licensed/unlicensed? Purely for purposes of acquisition.
no subject
Date: 2008-08-08 08:44 pm (UTC)