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Template:Infobox writer

Template:Nihongo is a Japanese manga artist.

Biography

During elementary school, Furuya enrolled in the Osamu Tezuka Manga Correspondence Course and by the time he reached high school he had discovered a darker, more underground style.

He graduated from Tama Art University, where he majored in oil painting and developed an interest in sculpting and Butoh dance.[1] During college his work evolved from figurative to eventually dealing more with abstract shapes.

In 1994, Furuya published his debut series Palepoli in the renowned alternative manga magazine Garo. After graduating from college, he initially planned to work as a full-time artist while doing illustrations on the side, but his success in manga shifted his focus. Soon after, he published the gag manga Short Cuts in the mainstream seinen manga magazine Weekly Young Sunday.

He was a regular contributor to the alternative manga magazine Manga Erotics F from its beginnings in 2001 on. For this magazine he created the manga Lychee Light Club, based on a stage play, about a group of middle school boys aiming to build an AI with cruel tactics has been adapted into a TV anime series.

Otherwise, since the 2000s, he has published in mainstream seinen and shōnen manga magazines of different publishers like Kodansha, Shogakukan, Shueisha and Shinchosha, but also drew a yonkoma series for the daily newspaper Yomiuri Shimbun and made a manga biography about Emperor Akihito's life for the weekly magazine Shūkan Post.

Style and themes

Furuya works across different manga genres and has a broad variety of art styles, ranging from photorealistic drawing to mascot-like cute characters. His work has been published in major manga magazines as well as more underground magazines and cultural magazines. Masanao Amano describes that Furuya is known for "taking ordinary everyday situations, and adding instantaneous humor or transforming them into a mysterious world that showcases his surrealistic sense."[2]

His work is influenced by the New Wave movement in manga in the 1980s.[3]

Christianity is a recurring theme of his work. According to Sean Patrick Webb, christianity is found "most often in the context of Japanese children and adolescents struggling against childish impulses and making the transition to adulthood."[4]

Reception

Furuya's manga have been translated, among others, into English, French, German, Italian and Spanish.

While Furuya has not won any major manga awards so far, he was nominated or selected several times:

Award Year Category Recipient(s) Result Template:Abbr
American Library Association 2012 Great Graphic Novels for Teens Genkaku Picasso Template:Nominated [5]
Japan Media Arts Festival 2011 Manga Award No Longer Human Template:Longlisted [6]
2015 Manga Award Joshikōsei ni Korosaretai Template:Longlisted [7]

Works

Manga

Title Year Notes Refs
Template:Nihongo 1994–1995 Serialized in Garo
Published in 1 vol.
Excerpted in Viz's defunct Pulp magazine and in Secret Comics Japan, also from Viz.
Template:Nihongo 1996–1999 Serialized in Weekly Young Sunday
Published in 2 vol.
Published in English by Viz
[8]
Wsamarus 2001 1998–1999 Serialied in Studio Voice
Published in 1 vol.
[9]
Garden 2000 Short story collection with stories previously published in Comic Cue, Manga Erotics and Garo [10]
Plastic Girl 2000 Short story collection
The Music of Marie (Marieの奏でる音楽, Marie no kanaderu ongaku) 2000–2001 Serialized in Comic Birz
Published in 2 vol.
Published in English by One Peace books
[11][12]
Suicide Circle (自殺サークル, Jisatsu Sākuru) 2002 Serialized in Manga Erotics F
Published by Ohta Publishing in 1 vol.
Published in French by Casterman as Le Cercle du Suicide
Template:Nihongo 2002–2005 Serialized in Big Comic Spirits
Published in 9 vol.
Template:Nihongo 2004 Serialized in Da Vinci
Published by Media Factory in 1 vol.
Template:Nihongo 2006 Short story collection
Lychee Light Club (ライチ☆光クラブ, Litchi☆Hikari Club) 2005–2006 Written by Norimizu Ameya
Serialized in Manga Erotics F
Published in 1 vol.
Published in English by Vertical Inc as Lychee Light Club
[13]
Template:Nihongo 2006 Written by Otsuichi
Published by Shueisha in 1 vol.
51 Ways to Save Her (彼女を守る51の方法, Kanojo wo Mamoru 51 no Hōhō) 2006–2007 Serialized in Weekly Comic Bunch
Published in 5 vol.
Licensed in English by CMX but never published
Loosely adapted into the anime series Tokyo Magnitude 8.0
Template:Nihongo 2008–2011 Serialized in Manga Erotics F
Published by Ohta Publishing in 3 vol.
[14]
Template:Nihongo 2008–2010 Serialized in Jump Square
Published in 3 vol.
Published in English by Viz as Genkaku Picasso
Template:Nihongo 2008–2012 Serialized in Yomiuri Shimbun
No Longer Human (人間失格, Ningen Shikkaku) 2009–2011 Adaptation of No Longer Human by Osamu Dazai
Serialized in Weekly Comic Bunch
Published by Shinchosha in 3 vol.
Published in English by Vertical Inc
Template:Nihongo 2010–2016 Serialized in Jump SQ.19 and Jump Square
Published in 14 vol.
[15]
Bokura no☆Hikari Club (ぼくらの☆ひかりクラブ) 2011–2012 Prequel to Lychee Light Club
Serialized in Pocopoco
Published by Ohta Publishing in 2 vol.
Template:Nihongo 2013–2016 Serialized in Go Go Bunch
Published by Shinchosha in 2 vol.
[13]
Template:Nihongo 2016–2017 Serialized in Go Go Bunch
Published by Shinchosha in 1 vol.
[16]
Template:Nihongo 2017–2020 Serialized in Morning Two
Published by Kodansha in 7 vol.
[17]
Akihito Tennō Monogatari (明仁天皇物語) 2019 Based on a script by Issei Eifuku
Serialized in Shūkan Post
Published by Shogakukan in 1 vol.
[18]
Template:Nihongo 2020–Present Serialized in Monthly Comic Bunch
Published by Shinchosha in 3 vol. (as of January 2023)
[17]
Template:Nihongo 2021–2022 Written by Rina Ikoma
Serialized in Monthly Comic Bunch
Published by Shinchosha in 1 vol.

Illustrations

  • Flowers

Films/plays

References

External links

Template:Authority control