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TOKYOPOP launches new romance imprint, LoveLove

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The LoveLove imprint announced new manga titles beginning in the fall of 2023, bringing even more TOKYOPOP to the legions of readers lusting for romance fiction.

PREVIEW: Read an excerpt of TOKYOPOP’s GUARDIAN OF FUKUSHIMA

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The new graphic novel relates how Naoto Matsumura risked his life to save abandoned animals in the aftermath of the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster

Comings and goings at Boom and Tokyopop

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Boom and Tokyopop have made some personnel changes and here's what you need to know.

Sales Charts: In Which Walking Dead Is the #2 Selling Non-Event Title in Comics...

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It's really hard for DC and Marvel to break 70K without some kind of stunt. Enter: Kirkman.

A Nightmare Before Christmas Sequel: TokyoPop Re-Emerges With Disney Licenses

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There's definitely a flurry of activity over at TokyoPop and they're playing The Mouse Card.  Headlining this are a couple of Nightmare Before Christmas projects, first a manga adaption due out in September by Jun...

SDCC ’17 Watchtower Roundup: Walking Dead TV Art; The ’16 Ghostbusters Get Their Own...

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A few more notes on things we're seeing from orbit on monitor duty in The Beat's Watchtower: The may have cancelled the Walking Dead panel, but we've got some art for the two TV versions... The...

TOLJA! Tokyopop is back with publishing plans

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As I noted a few weeks back, Tokyopop, the company that came in changed comics and then crashed and burned, suspending publication for the most part back in 2011, is coming back as announced on a panel at Anime Expo with plans to begin publishing again in 2016" announced by founder Stu Levy.

Know your exploiters in comics: a brief guide

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This is an old link, but Robort Boyd has posted a slideshow he delivered on Comixploitation! that rounds up some of the more egregious examples of horrible artistic rip-offs in comics over the years,...

Is TokyoPop still coming back?

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Founded in 1997, TokyoPop was one of the most influential publishers of the Aughts, driving the manga boom in the US as the first publisher to print manga in its original right-to-left format, a move that helped cement its authenticity among young readers. Later on their "original English language manga" line developed an entire generation of young creators working in a manga style, including Becky Cloonan and Amy Reeder Hadley. But it all came to an end in 2011 when the company shut down except for the German office. Owner and founder Stuart Levy went on to make a documentary about the Tohoku earthquake, even amidst continuing controversy about the reversion of rights to creators However there have been flickers of life since then, with some new digital publishing, licensing OEL books like King City to Image, and a TokyoPop-branded newsletter that was part of Nerdist's adventures in that area. Since TokyoPop never went bankrupt, it's entirely possible that Levy can bring it back, as promised on the company's about page:

24 Hours of International Comics: Germany

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Guten Tag! Germany... it's a bit of a conundrum in Continental comics. Smack dab in the middle of Europe, it gets a lot of comics imported from other countries, mostly from neighboring Belgium and France.  It...

Titan Announces The Best of British Comics

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Titan has socialed up the above image and some information:

Can creators really get their books back from Tokyopop?

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We've been covering the sometimes glorious, sometimes ignominious history of Tokyopop for as long as there has been a Beat. Although its biggest legacy is as a manga innovator, its most notorious is the...

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