"Bobbie Sellers" wrote in message news:o47cl8$tf9$
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On 12/30/2016 05:10 PM, Kenneth M. Lin wrote:
I think pacing was the major issue with the "1st Generation" because
this was in monthly installment and author did it in real time until the
very end. And he typically produced only 24 pages a month, including
the cover. (In contrast, weekly manga is 18 pages plus cover.) The
story is quite dense so he could draw a little bigger and get the page
count up but I think plotting was an issue and he can only come up with
so much story every month.
If he has lots of plot and ideas the problem is to draw
the more interesting parts in each chapter to keep the readers interest
and give them reasons to come back to the story in every issue.
Check on the magazine that published the story originally. I think
it does not come out every month.
So typically they have to devote the April issue to recruiting new
member. Then there are typically couple conventions they attend and
preparing for them. And a school festival. You never see any of them studying nor find out what their majors are. This is problematic for
the supposed main character Sasahara, who was new to the otaku culture
at the beginning and never did much except to try out some "ero games."
He used those games for the intended purpose though it was
blanked out as an image. Hardly "try out".
And yet he landed a job as a manga editor when he graduated. Most other characters have their niche from the beginning and they just kind of
stuck to it. Saki just came along because she likes Koosaka and didn't contribute much except being forced into cosplay here and there.
Sasahara as Club President initiates and with help from
Saki Kasukeba, the business major and girlfriend of Kousaku published
a doujin including art from both a senior member, Kugayama, who is
rather difficult and from Oguie mentioned below.
Oota, another female student, joined fairly early on and another girl,
Ogiue, joined much later. She draws manga so the club felt more evenly balanced but in one storyline she drew yaoi manga starring two male
members of the club.
Kanako Ohno is the regular spelling of this character's name,
which you render as Oota. Ohno is a devoted cos-player which gives
Tanaka a lot of hope.
I don't know how you arrived at the spelling in Romanji of
the character names. At the article at the URL below, there is a lot
of information on the story and on the character names.
I was probably typing too quickly and may also have forgotten the names of
the characters. In Japanese version they typically show how the name is pronounced just once when that name is first used within the volume. Just
like Katou is spelled more commonly as "Kato" in U.S., it's hard to say
which spelling is correct. Ohno is pronounced as O-o-No, not Oh-No in
Japanese so I spelled it that way.
<
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Genshiken_characters>
In "Genshiken Nidaime", published in the USA as
"Genshiken:Second Season" Oguie becomes the Club President.
She continued to draw yaoi of her fellow and former club
members along with Hato and several others inside and
outside of the Genshiken club. She also becomes the best
sort of mangaka.
Sasahara who becomes Oguie's boyfriend and lover, goes
out and looks for work at publishers as an editor until he spots
an advertisement for a company that provides manga editors to
publishers. He was a shy and retiring sort of otaku when he
joins the club as viewpoint sort of character but with the
encouragement of his senior members he becomes more open
about his interests, Oh and the reason he looks for such
work is that manga and anime are such a large part of his
life he wishes to work in the industry.
And the original President has a real name but
you have to read closely to find out where it is set
out. I have read Genshiken, the original 9 volumes
at least 5 times which is how I got so familiar with
the plot twists and the meaning of the characters.
I have read the available volume of Nidaime nearly as
often and have watched both the anime and the OVAs
published in the "Kujibiki Unbalance" DVD and the
chapters on which they were based as published in
the translated, printed volumes.
"Kujibiki Unbalance" started as an anime
and manga internal to the main show and became
an independent manga and anime. The Genshiken DVDs
included chapters of the supposed anime and when
KU was put on SVDs OVAs of Genshiken were included
to keep the main story alive and moving.
All of the Genshiken OVA stuff that was
published became part of Genshiken Nidaime/Second
Season manga.
Possibly the best part is where the mangaka
who enjoyed "Genshiken" give their opinion via pages
in a particular volume of the story and its accuracy
relating to the clubs that they knew.
bliss
--
bliss dash SF 4 ever at dslextreme dot com
The last volume I have is 19 and it looks like the series ended at 21, which was published in Japan in October of 2016. I don't recall ever seeing Genshiken at Kinokuniya so I might have to read the rest online somewhere.
I assume they covered about one year of their lives in 12 volumes, with each volume containing six monthly installments.
I wonder why the author took four years off between the first and second seasons as the story naturally picked up
immediately after the end of first season.
A great deal of second season explored Madarame and his various "love interests," one of which is Hato and neither one of them is gay. This
actually took up an insane amount of chapters and it kind of strange as Madarame didn't particular stand out in first season. I even wonder if the author set up that nose hair thing in first season fully planning on
bringing it back later on.
Some of the chapters in second season is titled "Kujibiki Unbalance" as a tribute to the manga-inside-manga.
I really enjoyed the series even though it was extremely unrealistic. I
wonder if you were offended with the way Susanna and Angela were portrayed.
Ken
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