Six one-shots, including Nightow's doujin work before his debut. 1) Sandy to Tooi Mori no Nakamatachi 2) Bokura no Zujou ni Kare no Basho 3) Christmas Heart 4) Call xxxx 5) Christmas Heart Again Extra: Satellite Lovers
The science-fiction romantic comedy manga centers on Yukito Takiguchi, an unpopular science college student, who has developed the ultimate matching system. A woman who claims to be his future wife then appears before him. (Source: Anime News Network)
The fierce battle royale between 13 riders is about to begin! Only the final survivor can win the "power to make all wishes come true." (Source: Kadokawa, translated)
One of Two Manga's Based on Square Enix's Strategy RPG Series "Front Mission"
The iDOLM@STER: Cinderella Girls anthology by various mangaka.
Retired deep-sea diver Albert goes on one final job to recover a unique, once in a lifetime treasure, which is said to be inside the safe of a U-Boat, 620 meters under sea. Together with his old team, the treasure hunters known as DEEP, the mission to recover the safe begins...?
A boy wants to confess his love to his senpai, but his plans are ruined when he turns into a girl. The twist is when she finds out that he's a girl, and she tells him she used to be a boy too, and promises to show him the ropes of girlhood.
The coming-of-age story of Nao's dream to become a guide dog trainer! Dumped, unemployed and generally unsuccessful office lady Konno Nao. The story depicts Nao's development from a woman sick of life and people to someone who dreams of becoming a guide dog trainer after a chance meeting. “Memorize the names of 60 dogs?” “Work from 6:30AM to 10:00PM for five years?” All kinds of surprising facts come to light! Currently running in Manga Action! (Source: Jmanga)
Publisher Hayakawa is celebrating its 70th anniversary with two manga anthology reprints. One collection is dedicated to mystery works while the other compiles sci-fi stories printed over the publisher's long career.
In the 1980s two great players anchored the Yomiuri Giants: "Monster" Suguru Egawa and "Weed" Takashi Nishimoto. As pitching aces for the same team, the two had a legendary rivalry unparalleled in Japanese baseball history. With two real personages as his protagonists, the author based his bold interweaving of fact and conjecture on exhaustive interviews with Nishimoto and other featured individuals. (Source: Japan Media Arts Festival)

