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In 2008, it won the Best Shōjo Manga award in the 32nd Annual Kodansha Manga Award. [1] The series was also nominated for the first Manga Taisho awards in 2008. [2] The manga was first published as a one-shot in Shueisha's shōjo manga magazine Bessatsu Margaret on August 11, 2005, [3] and planned to be compiled in her previous work, Crazy For ...
Say I Love You (Japanese: 好きっていいなよ。, Hepburn: Suki-tte ii na yo) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Kanae Hazuki. It was serialized in Kodansha's shōjo manga magazine Dessert from February 2008 to July 2017, with its chapters collected in 18 tankōbon volumes.
Even after the war, he returned to his Incarnate form and continued to take care of the children, but he began screaming in the middle of the night, scaring the local villagers and even hunting the village's livestock, causing Schaal to have to send the orphans to a safe place, so he voluntarily let Hank kill him for the sake of his daughter ...
' Let's Go to the Family Restaurant '), was published in the December 2020 issue of Enterbrain's manga magazine Comic Beam on November 12, 2020. The one-shot depicts Satomi as a freshman in college. [8] The bonus chapter from the Enterbrain edition was re-published in the May 2021 issue of Comic Beam, published on April 12, 2021. [9]
Footsoldier D (戦闘員D, Sentōin D) Voiced by: Yūsuke Kobayashi [2] (Japanese); Zeno Robinson [3] (English) A rebellious foot soldier from the villainous army in the sky fortress that arrived 13 years ago, he is a Duster with transformative and regeneration abilities alongside his fellow foot soldiers who vowed to defeat the Dragon Keepers by infiltrating their organization and ranks.
At the 2010 San Diego Comic-Con, comic book publisher Drawn & Quarterly announced it had acquired the manga's publishing rights and would release it in North America under the title Onward Towards Our Noble Deaths. [3] The company released the manga in May 2011; it was the first manga by Mizuki published in English. [16]
Abe wrote the series based on his own experience in prison. [2] The manga started its serialization in Shogakukan's seinen manga magazine Weekly Young Sunday on November 21, 2002. [a] After Weekly Young Sunday ceased its publication on July 31, 2008, [6] the series was transferred to Weekly Big Comic Spirits, starting on June 15, 2009.
The first eighteen volumes of the manga series were adapted into a 114-episode anime series by Toei Animation, while a series of OVAs adapted the following volumes in 31 episodes. The series was re-released in 2003 in 19 volumes with Setteis from the anime adaptation called the "Remix Version".