Exciting news! VIZ Media and comiXology have announced a massive addition of over 650 new VIZ Media manga titles that were originally published in Japan and are now available in English on comiXology.com and on the comiXology app for Kindle, iPad, iPhone, Android and Windows 8!

Official press release below with all the details and some series highlights. A couple of my favorites are Magi and Black Bird.

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Today, over 650 new manga volumes, spanning more than 65 acclaimed series, and all in English, have been added to the comiXology platform for manga fans to browse, buy and enjoy. Many VIZ Media series are now available in their entirety and span an extremely diverse range of adventure, action, sci-fi, horror, mystery, and romance genres. New volumes of fan-favorite continuing series are added to comiXology each week as part of VIZ Media’s regular weekly digital manga update schedule. Please visit www.comixology.com for more information.

 

All the new VIZ Media manga titles found in this massive update were originally published in Japan by Shogakukan, Inc., a VIZ Media parent company and one of Japan’s biggest publishing companies. This latest comiXology content update makes more than 1,100 VIZ Media manga volumes across more than 190 different series available. Readers can enjoy all these acclaimed releases using comiXology’s Manga Fixed Format, which enables a dedicated right-to-left full-page reading experience and the highest resolution pages available.

 

“With this latest update manga fans now have even more to love with these VIZ Media Shogakukan books,” said comiXology CEO and co-founder David Steinberger. “VIZ Media’s huge library of classic and fan-favorite series offer something for every reader and every week we’re bringing even more to the comiXology platform.”

 

“The latest titles to join comiXology’s catalog substantially expands the VIZ Media roster of series available through the platform, and we are thrilled to deepen our relationship with this innovative platform and offer so much exciting new content to fans,” says Eric Eberhardt, VIZ Media’s Director of Digital Marketing. “Readers are increasingly enjoying their favorite titles digitally, and comiXology has become a great destination for them to access a broad array of content. This latest update provides the latest installments for scores of continuing VIZ Media series and the complete runs of dozens of other acclaimed legacy titles.”

 

New and notable VIZ Media manga series now available on comiXology include:

 

MAGI Vols. 1-10 • Rated ‘T’ for Teens • Continuing Series
Deep within the desert lie the mysterious Dungeons, vast stores of riches there for the taking by anyone lucky enough to find them and brave enough to venture into the depths from where few have ever returned. Plucky young adventurer Aladdin means to find the Dungeons and their riches, but Aladdin may be just as mysterious as the treasures he seeks.

 

CASE CLOSED Vols. 1-53 • Rated ‘T+’ for Older Teens • Continuing Series
Jimmy Kudo, the son of a world-renowned mystery writer, is a high school detective who has cracked the most baffling of cases. One day while on a date with his childhood friend Rachel Moore, Jimmy observes a pair of men in black involved in some shady business. The men capture Jimmy and give him a poisonous substance to rub out their witness. But instead of killing him, it turns him into a little kid! Jimmy takes on the pseudonym Conan Edogawa and continues to solve all the difficult cases that come his way. All the while, he’s looking for the men in black and the mysterious organization they’re with in order to find a cure for his miniature malady.

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BLACK BIRD Vols. 1-18 • Rated ‘T’ for Teens • Complete Series
There is a world of myth and magic that intersects ours, and only a special few can see it. Misao Harada is one such person, and she wants nothing to do with magical realms. She just wants to have a normal high school life and maybe get a boyfriend. But she is the bride of demon prophecy, and her blood grants incredible powers, her flesh immortality. Now the demon realm is fighting over the right to her hand…or her life!

 

THE DRIFTING CLASSROOM Vols. 1-10 • Rated ‘M’ for Mature Readers • Complete Series
Out of nowhere, a Japanese elementary school is transported into a hostile world. Soon, the students and teachers must struggle to survive in impossible conditions, besieged by terrifying creatures and beset by madness. Part horror, part science fiction, THE DRIFTING CLASSROOM is a classic can’t-put-down manga series from horror manga master Kazuo Umezu.

 

HAPPY MARRIAGE?! Vols. 1-10 • Rated ‘M’ for Mature Readers • Complete Series
In order to help her father, Chiwa Takanashi agrees to an arranged marriage with the company president, Hokuto Mamiya – a man she doesn’t know – at the request of Hokuto’s grandfather. Chiwa believes the arrangement isn’t binding, but her new partner seems to think otherwise. Can two strangers living together find their way to a happy marriage?!

 

ITSUWARIBITO Vols. 1-13 • Rated ‘T+’ for Older Teens • Continuing Series
Utsuho’s truthfulness as a child resulted in an enormous catastrophe, and he decided to lie from that day forward. Raised in a village of orphans by a monk, Utsuho is an unrepentant troublemaker. The monk eventually inspires him to help people, but there’s no way Utsuho’s going to lead an honest life! Instead, he’s going to use his talents for mischief and deception for good!

 

MIDNIGHT SECRETARY Vols. 1-7 • Rated ‘M’ for Mature Readers • Complete Series
Kaya Satozuka prides herself on being an excellent secretary and a consummate professional, so she doesn’t even bat an eye when she’s reassigned to the office of her company’s difficult director, Kyohei Touma. He’s as prickly – and hot – as rumors paint him, but Kaya is unfazed…until she discovers that he’s a vampire!!

 

With over 50,000 comics, manga, and graphic novels from more than 75 publishers, comiXology offers one of the biggest selection of digital comics in the world. ComiXology’s immense catalog and cinematic Guided View reading experience makes it the best digital platform for comic, manga and graphic novel fans worldwide. Fans can discover favorite comics, manga and graphic novels at comixology.com and also try the comiXology app available on all major mobile platforms.

For more information on manga titles available from VIZ Media, please visit www.VIZ.com.

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About comiXology
ComiXology, an Amazon.com, Inc. subsidiary (NASDAQ:AMZN), has revolutionized the comic book and graphic novel industry by delivering a cloud-based digital comics platform that makes discovering, buying, and reading comics more fun than ever before. ComiXology’s Guided View reading technology transforms the comic book medium into an immersive and cinematic experience, helping comiXology become a top ten grossing iPad app in 2011 and 2012 and the top grossing non-game iPad app in 2012 and 2013. Offering the broadest library of comic book content from over 75 publishers – and independent creators as well – comiXology will not stop until everyone on the face of the planet has become a comic book fan. ComiXology is based in New York City, with operations in Los Angeles and Paris. For more information visit www.comixology.com.

About VIZ Media, LLC
Headquartered in San Francisco, California, VIZ Media distributes, markets and licenses the best anime and manga titles direct from Japan. Owned by three of Japan’s largest manga and animation companies, Shueisha Inc., Shogakukan Inc., and Shogakukan-Shueisha Productions, Co., Ltd., VIZ Media has the most extensive library of anime and manga for English speaking audiences in North America, the United Kingdom, Ireland and South Africa. With its popular digital manga anthology WEEKLY SHONEN JUMP and blockbuster properties like NARUTO, BLEACH and ONE PIECE, VIZ Media offers cutting-edge action, romance and family friendly properties for anime, manga, science fiction and fantasy fans of all ages. VIZ Media properties are available as graphic novels, DVDs, animated television series, feature films, downloadable and streaming video and a variety of consumer products. Learn more about VIZ Media, anime and manga at www.VIZ.com.

“We know exactly what the end will be. And what’s coming before the end. And it’s all outlined and waiting. I just have to finish writing it.”

That’s what Alex de Campi, the force behind some of the best fantasy and sci-fi graphic novels out today, told me about the inevitable conclusion to one of her most popular series, ValentineNoted for pioneering comics into the digital age but renowned for its storytelling, Valentine is a fantasy epic that is all about embracing the unknown: A soldier of Napoleon’s forces during the harsh winter of 1812 finds himself at the center of a conflict between his world and the world of magic.

“And that’s another thing I love about Thrillbent. They’re not snippy about their platform,” she says enthusiastically about her publishers. “They just want people to read comics. So they’re like, okay, we’re on Thrillbent, and we’re also on Comixology. And even though they’re just ‘a distributor,’ they were incredibly, incredibly supportive of Valentine all through our early days. And so I really wanted to get back on there where we also have fans.”

And appreciative of those fans she is. Thrillbent has unleashed Valentine Volume Two, and I talk to de Campi about everything Valentine, ’80s sci-fi, Point Blank, and her love of military history.

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Valentine is often cited as the work that proved comics can live in the digital medium. Its very storytelling is unique to digital webpages, tension unfolds in the art and transitions in ways even the human eye can’t replicate on paper. Did you intend to make Valentine prove the digital format? What led you to choose its distribution method?

Alex: We weren’t really out to prove anything. I’m a great believer in serialized, visualized fiction. And I wanted to do a book that people could just, you know not everyone sits in front of their laptop. There come times when you’re in the doctor’s waiting room, on the subway, on the bus, just between something. On break from work. On the balcony. And you don’t want to be sitting in front of a large screen. But you’ve got a phone in your pocket at almost all times. So, you pull it out and you can read a little bit of Valentine. And that’s what I was really trying to create. Something that could fill up ten really good minutes of your life between other things on your phone.

And, [in terms of] working visually, some people have trouble reading comics on a page. Especially people who are coming to them later in life. Whereas looking at Valentine on your phone — you know, even if you find comics on a page a little difficult, or you don’t like going to comic stores, or you’re just confused by the amount of titles out there — here is something that you can just enjoy. And that’s all we intended to. There’s no one way to do comics. I do comics on the printed page that I love, I do some digital work that I love, so it’s fun to try new things. But I’m not saying that everything should be like Valentine.

Our hero Valentine is a soldier of Napoleon suffering the Russian winter of 1812. It’s not a setting even movies visit often. What was it about that time and place that attracts you that other eras don’t?

Alex: I love history. I’m a voracious reader and researcher. And I absolutely love history. And I think that more writers should be into history.

Oh yeah, definitely.

Alex: And I especially love military history. Which admittedly it’s not something that you think of when you think a female comics writer, you know we tend to get pigeon-hold into doing things with talking cats and stuff, but actually there’s a hugely wide variety of female talent and we write all sorts of things. A lot of my work coming out in the next year or two is actually set in specific time periods… [But] there are reasons Valentine is set in that time period mostly because they allow me to do a nice twist later on, which I can’t reveal because, spoilers!

But there is a long, thought-out reason. And it’s ultimately, incredibly visually arresting: the white of the snow, red of the blood. There is the blue of the frozen bodies. It’s a very visual spectacle. And you automatically throw your characters in there, and you know that they’re in peril. Blizzards are terrifying. Being alone in blizzards is terrifying, and cold. And it was one of the great military tragedies of all time. One of the great disasters. Half a million men marched in and fifty-thousand marched out.

Wow.

Alex: And it wasn’t really the Russians that killed them. It was the winter. It was sickness. It was lack of supplies. They didn’t bring coats. They marched into Moscow in the summer. And no one really did anything in the winter. They got tied up in negotiating with the Russians until too late in the year and didn’t get out in time. They had these paper-thin boots and people were just dying by the score. I could write an entire series on just the Russian campaign.

I would love to read that.

Alex: Maybe some day I will. [laughs]

Genre fiction today has plenty of stories that blend the modern with the supernatural, bizarre fantasy. But you’ve decided instead on early 19th century. Exactly what inspired the story of Valentine? To put mythical monsters in 1812?

Alex: Valentine is an epic story. We need to be careful with telling people it’s a work of historical fantasy, because it’s very much not. So, all I can say is that part of it is being suitable for the digital serialized storytelling, there are tons of twists that come at you when you don’t expect it. And that’s one of the great joys for me, keeping the reader on their toes. I will say that if you are expecting it to be entirely set in 1812, you are shit out of luck.

The idea of Valentine came from a very simple phrase that kept echoing through my mind. Which is, all the fairy tales are true. Which has inspired a number of famous stories, but my concept was more… if you read books that you’ll probably never read unless you’re nuts, like Sir James George Frazer’s The Golden Bough, or Joseph Campbell’s Hero of a Thousand Faces, which more people have read, those are both very flawed works for reasons I won’t get into here, because that’s a whole literary/anthropological, people-make-assumptions conversation that doesn’t necessarily have a place here, but there is a a lot commonality in a lot of the tales we tell around the world. Not necessarily for the reasons that Campbell or Frazer draw, but we all tale stories. There are always dragons. There are always bad, undead spirits. There are good spirits.

Partially us confronting our fears of nature, of the unknown, or weather, or death and dying, or sickness. Of leaving things unfinished. And so all these fears coalesce into these stories. And my rather simple explanation of that is, there’s a reason, not just our commonality of these fears across all cultures, that cause these. There is a belief in magic everywhere. You could say, in some ways, that magic is what we call things we don’t understand. Much of technology for us right now is magic. Back in the old days, someone recovering too quickly or falling too in love, or suddenly falling dead, that’s magic. There is obviously no magic now, but what if there was? What if something changed as the Earth “grew up”?

Admittedly humans have only been on Earth for like 1% of the Earth’s total lifespan. But what if at some point, very early on, the barriers between our world and other worlds were softer and there was magic? And as Earth grew into “young adulthood” and it all hardened, creatures couldn’t pass back and forth. Magic kind of drained away, because science and physics. And then what would happen to the creatures that got stuck here? Because, obviously if you’re an immortal, supernatural being, fucking with humans is a shit load of fun. Because we’re soft, we’re squishy, we’re great fun to manipulate, and all you have to do is a little bit of magic and we give you all our money.

But then the magic gets drained away. And then you’re no longer really super magical. Hunting humans has gotten pretty dull. And they’re stuck in their human forms. That’s not cool, like when you used to be a dragon or a unicorn and now you’re a f*cking cart horse.

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There’s a little more humor in Thrillbent’s release of Volume 2. What allowed you to relax a little bit that you couldn’t before?

Alex: There’s always humor in my works. There’s some pretty funny moments in part one, but also in part one you’re dealing with, as I said, one of the greatest military tragedies of all time. I didn’t really want to yuck it up. But the humor is mostly at the expense of Valentine, and I think that is an accurate perception that the way the characters live in a place where the humor is taking place. It’s supposed to be the world of your dreams, and this is what happens when the characters turn out to be quite petty. Valentine must feel like a very out of place, very insignificant, almost slightly abused person in there, but that’s how these people always treat humans. They needed him, and now they don’t need him, and they’re bored with him, and they’re increasingly bored with him, and they’re just gonna be nasty to him. And that’s partially where the humor comes in! That’s why it’s a little bit lighter, because it’s a trivial society.

You’re going from a great military tragedy and the destruction of everything Valentine understands and loves, to this hyperficial, set society. And also I’m poking fun at the tropes of fantasy [but] in ways that make sense. I grew up reading fantasy and science fiction, and I always say that every bad fantasy novel written in the 80’s, most of the ones in the 70’s and a couple in the 90’s — before they all became ten-volume, 900-page epics — I’ve read them all. If you go to goodshowsir.com and other bad sci-fi/fantasy cover blogs, I’ve read all of them. So I know these tropes and I love them, and I love tweaking them a little bit.

This is such an epic world you’ve built, but there’s only so much you can put in. Were there any particular ideas you wanted to explore in Valentine but couldn’t?

Alex: The pacing is quite fast, as is the pacing in a lot of my works, and yeah, I could have done story after story just in the world they’re in in the next few chapters. I could have done Valentine: The Early Years, in fact in the paperback of Valentine that Image put out, we did a 40-page story on Valentine. You can still buy the paperback on my website. www.alexdecampi.com. Buy my stuff! [laughs]

What were some of your influences specifically on Valentine?

Alex: One specific influence for the stuff in the World of the Dawn in the chapters we’re getting into, was Michael Moorcock’s The Dancers at the End of Time, I grew up reading a ton of Michael Moorcock. [laughs] As any self-respecting sci-fi/fantasy nerd has. And Dancers at the End of Time is probably my favorite of his, which is an unusual choice.

I wanted to give props to your artist Christine Larsen for her phenomenal work. What influenced the look and the aesthetic of Valentine?

Alex: It’s all Christine. It’s all her. I’m rather specific about color, and so I was really pleased when Christine and the colorist on the episodes you’re seeing with Tim Durning, Christine herself has gone back to doing colors in the new episodes, but Tim was coloring from about chapter 4 onwards in the old stuff. We talked very specifically about the language of color. We definitely made a choice the opening sequences should be extremely desaturated, except for the red. And when Valentine goes through the gate, everything is extremely saturated and bright and shiny. Each scene has a color, a bit like the John Boorman film Point Blank in that respect, but we play with saturation a lot more than he does. And if you haven’t seen the original Point Blank, go see it.

You said the big idea behind Valentine is to sort of embrace the unknown. Why is that such an attractive theme to you? Why does it speak to you so much?

Alex: We have to do things that scare us to grow as humans. If we stay in a safe area the whole time, we’ll be safe, but nothing interesting will happen. Things will happen to us and we will not happen to things. And I believe in going out there and happening. And that comes from embracing the unknown. Like, doing a comic for a phone. I pitched it to Vertigo in 2005 and they asked, “Why would anyone read a comic on their phone? That’s stupid, go away.” And I was like, “OK. That’s fine.” Valentine is embracing and learning about the unknown and the dark edges and the fringes of our universe. It goes hand in hand with the way Valentine is presented as a digital comic. And it was embraced! We were downloaded half a million times on Comixology. That’s a LOT. [laughs] I stopped paying attention after a quarter million.

What can we look forward to in the future of the story?

Alex: The climactic battle between good and evil. Basically. [laughs] Roland and company come back, lots of people come back. It’s Valentine vs. the world. The stakes continue to rise. The love affair gets more complicated. It all gets very difficult for poor Valentine.

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Your previous works have run the gamut of genre categories. You’ve done tween mystery in manga, French noir, political thrillers, and now fantasy. What other genres do you intend to tackle next? Are there any you’ve always wanted to explore?

Alex: I’ve always said I’ve wanted to do a western. A lot of my stories are western, even though they’re not marketed as such. In some ways, next year is my year of coming home to the story types I truly love. Which tend to be spy thrillers. I’m doing a five-issue spy thriller with Matt Southworth who did the first volume of Stumptown. Wonderful artist and fantastic writer in his own right. I’m doing a story with Perez that’s an eight-issue noir, sort of mafia noir set in Cuba starting at the end of next year. And these are all pretty much written. I was writing issue two of the spy thing with Matt, and I said to him, “I think I’ve accidentally written a western.” There are no cowboys in it, but it has a showdown at the OK Corrall type of feel to it.

I have an ongoing theme in my work of the people out of time or the way of life is changing, or have changed, by people outside of their own culture. And that presents itself as exploring what it’s like to be an ex-patriot, because I’ve lived outside of the United States for a long time. Both in Hong Kong and then London, with short stints in Manila and South America. So that’s something I’m very knowledgable about from first-hand life experiences. Some of the stories that we love are in some ways becoming redundant or irrelevant because of technology. The spy story, what is one man with a gun when there are cameras everywhere? So westerns are always love stories about the passing of an era. The great cattle farms are being broken up. The railroad is coming. There is some sort of weather: drought, fire, whatever. It’s about the end to a way of life. And I write that a lot.

Valentine Volume 2 is now available on Thrillbent and Comixology. You can keep up with Alex de Campi at her website here.

Briefly: If you’re a regular user of the iOS ComiXology app, you’ve likely already realized that the latest update stinks.

If the fact that you can no longer buy books within the app wasn’t bad enough, the realization that so much of the functionality that made the app great (and addictive) in the first place is now nowhere to be found will likely have you searching (and failing to find) a worthy alternative.

Gerry Conway, the comic book writer most famous for killing Gwen Stacy AND co-creating the Punisher, has written an excellent guest column on ComicBook.com about just how terrible Amazon’s move is, and what it means for the industry. Here’s a small excerpt:

And so, as we could have predicted, Amazon wrecks Comixology.

What has it been, less than a month since Jeff Bezos bought the most promising tool for renewing the mass distribution of comics in the digital era? I’ll give the man this: he’s moved faster to undermine an existing technology for the benefit of his own company than General Motors did when it sabotaged Los Angeles’s public transit Red Line for the benefit of the bus fleet they wanted to sell the City of Angels. Job well done, Jeff.

Be sure to head over to ComicBook.com for the full article. It’s well worth it.

Have you used the new app yet? Are you ready to give up digital comics? Sound out below.

Banner via TheComicBooks

ComiXology is pretty fantastic as far as digital comics go. You simply buy issues/TPBs (typically the same day as print), and you can easily read them on you iOS or Android devices wherever you are.

I’ve used the service quite frequently and have found it to be an absolute pleasure. Both Marvel and DC, as well as a ton of other companies are heavily represented with the service.

ComiXology is about to hit a pretty substantial milestone of 100 Million downloads (!) and to celebrate, they’re going to be giving away a free issue daily until then.

Today is day one, and the book up for grabs is the premiere of the fantastic (and sadly just completed) Spider-Men. Brian Michael Bendis wove a wonderful tale here, sending 616  Peter Parker into a world where he is dead and a new Spider-Man has begun to protect the city. The serious is wonderful, and is one that is going to stick with me for quite some time. It was well worth the money to pay for, so you owe it to yourself to pick it up for free!

To get your free issue, simply head to comiXology.com/redeem and enter the code #CountdownDay1. This will add the title to your account!

Be sure to check blog.comixology.com/spotlight/ daily to get more free books!

Thanks ComiXology!

Five months since launch. Six issues in. I’m enamored with these characters. I’m in love with this world. I’ll buy every issue until its sweet, sweet conclusion.

If you haven’t taken the plunge with Vaughan’s latest, here’s an awesome opportunity. All you need is an iOS or Android device and a copy of ComiXology.

Again, Brian K Vaughan (Y: The Last Man, Ex Machina, Runaways, Lost) spins an elegant, action-packed, gripping tale of love, loss, war, philosophy, and so much more.

This has also been my first taste of artist Fiona Staples, whose insanely vibrant, unbelievably beautiful art is just as evocative as Brian’s work, if not more so. I want more, constantly. I’d cover my walls with it if I could.

There isn’t much more to say. It’s an amazing book, and you can get into it for free right now. But get on it! I’m sure it won’t last long!

Download it now on Comixology!

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Heidi and Stephen are back and looking into their crystal ball to ponder the future of comic books. Will digital prevail? What are the issues that digital comics currently face? Can people still appreciate art on paper? Will Heidi ever get over not having access to good leggings in the early 00s? Find out all this and more by listening or downloading below!

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