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Orenchi No Maid-San 2 (Hobby). Chapter 55: Koharu's Big Chest. mm
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.A feeling of volume that fits in both hands. Smooth surface. Pinkish shiny bumps.1st of every monthA new heart that suits your taste will be found.Monthly Chest September Issue-Raisin Intensive Care RoomJisoo has a lot of troubles with her bigger chest than others.he goes to the hospital with anxiety that there may be something wrong with his body…Monthly Chest October-An Island to Become a Real ManAndrew got into an accident during flight training.After being in distress on an unknown island, he is greeted strongly by the natives…Monthly Chest November-Striker Becomes GoalIntern reporter Lee Jae-yeon who interviewed sports star Kim Gun-woo.I witness the reversal of the player who has only lost talent in Inseong Bottom…
A feeling of volume that fits in both hands. Smooth surface. Pinkish shiny bumps.1st of every monthA new heart that suits your taste will be found.Monthly Chest September Issue-Raisin Intensive Care RoomJisoo has a lot of troubles with her bigger chest than others.he goes to the hospital with anxiety that there may be something wrong with his body…Monthly Chest October-An Island to Become a Real ManAndrew got into an accident during flight training.After being in distress on an unknown island, he is greeted strongly by the natives…Monthly Chest November-Striker Becomes GoalIntern reporter Lee Jae-yeon who interviewed sports star Kim Gun-woo.I witness the reversal of the player who has only lost talent in Inseong Bottom…
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#exceso #bigbutt #yaoi #yaoibara #gayillustration #gay #bara #muscle #bigpecs #buttmale
More than happy to talk, although I’m not sure how much help I’ll be, since I’m merely a reader with no inside info. The people at Digital Manga Publishing (the biggest standing BL publisher) seem to be quite responsive to academic/journalistic inquires; you could try giving dropping them a line.
But to put this in perspective, the big manga market adjustment really happened in 2008 and 2009, when we went from publishing 40-odd titles a month to 20, and then to 10-15. Borders or no Borders (and Borders was definitely a factor in that decision for us), and whether we’re talking supply or demand, the US market just doesn’t support two companies printing 40-plus volumes a month, with several smaller publishers adding another 20 or 30 to the pile. TP learned that lesson the hard way three years ago, and everyone else followed shortly thereafter in one way or another, and that’s not going to get un-learned any time soon. If TP’d gone under in 2008 there may have been more of a rush to fill the vacuum, but at this point, except on an individual title level, I don’t think our catalogue is going to be that sorely missed by the market overall (Our charming personalities and flamboyant marketing campaigns, maybe, but that’s another story!). VIZ’s shojo titles may get a little bump from the people who aren’t buying Maid-Sama and Gakuen Alice anymore, and Yen may see a little uptick from people with no more Trinity Blood or Deadman Wonderland to buy, it’s not the gaping void it might have been if we’d gone under sooner.
Publishers have been preparing for the Borders collapse for a while, so they’re already expanding into other venues. In the brick-and-mortar world, that includes Barnes & Noble, independent bookstores and small chains, and the comic-book direct market. There’s also a lot of interest in ebooks, especially Kindle and iPad editions, and in online comics in general, as evidenced by Viz’s big rollout of vizmanga.com at Comic-Con last week.
I’d say the bubble has burst, but the big manga titles are still popular and selling well; it’s just that publishers’ overall output is settling to a less artificially inflated level. Instead of scrambling to flood the market with every available license, publishers are cutting back and being cautious in picking up new titles. I hesitate to point to Tokyopop’s situation as proof of the boom times ending, since Tokyopop’s business problems had little to do with sales of its manga, and ultimately the company folded because the guy running it just had interests elsewhere. I’m more concerned about the precarious status of smaller publishers, but with Viz still huge, DMP on the rise, and Japanese publishers getting directly involved in the American market, the industry keeps marching on. I get the impression that last year was the toughest year.
For me, personally, the biggest problem with Borders closing is that Borders was very open to stocking yaoi/BL, and Barnes & Noble is not. I hope this situation changes, and that more bookstores get interested in BL. I’m saying this as a BL fan, of course, but also as someone who’s in the industry and believes that BL is going to be increasingly important as a steady seller to keep manga publishers profitable, just as romance novels keep print publishers profitable. Also, there are a bunch of awesome BL I want to see translated.





























