Weekly Serializations in Shonen Sunday (少年サンデー) |
![]() This is also the one of the only place to find the original color illustrations that Takahashi created for the series. Because the magazines are not meant to be kept these color illustrations have been particularly challenging to find. Each week a different artist is commissioned to do the cover and the first few pages which are done in color. With the exception of artbooks, these color pages are usually never reprinted. These days many artists use computers to color their work, but Rumiko Takahashi has stated she does not own a computer. She primarily uses watercolor for her coloring work. |
Tankobon (単行本) |
![]() Shonen Sunday tankobon are all printed in the Japanese B6 format (12.8 cm × 18.2 cm or 5.04 in × 7.17 in). |
Art Books |
![]() One of the best overall overviews of Takahashi's career is Rumic World 35 which is a three volume boxset comprising All Star, Showtime and the collected children's manga MOON, The Great Pet King. The first two volumes mentioned contain character profiles, items, locations and color art for all of her series up to Kyokai no RINNE to celebrate 35th anniversary of her debut. |
Miscellaneous Books |
![]() Unlike some of the prior novelizations of Takahashi's work such as those for Urusei Yatsura and the Mermaid Saga these novels do not contain any illustrations by Takahashi. Rather,these novels are adaptations of anime scripts which in turn are adaptations of Takahashi's original manga stories so the credits on the book are ornate. The three books are:
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Foreign Editions |
![]() For the first time ever a manga series was published concurrently in Japanese and English, and this was the series that first introduced that possibility. Each Wednesday, when Kyokai no RINNE is published in Shonen Sunday it is posted up a few hours later in English at TheRumicWorld.com. Unfortunately this experiment only lasted until chapter 90 when Japan was struck by the 2011 Tohoku Earthquake, and a major disruption to publication and other services began. As some Japanese readers could not receive Shonen Sunday on time, it was thought to be unfair that global readers should continue to get the manga easily online, and so the series never returned on its same day publication schedule. |