Manga Comic Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Manga Comic. Here they are! All 31 of them:

There's nothing happy about love at all!! I would rather have not known real love... if it hurts this much.
Chitose Yagami (Fall in Love Like a Comic! Vol. 1)
Simon's walls were covered in what looked like pages ripped from a comic book, but when I squinted, I realized they were hand drawn. Some were black-and-white, but most were in full color, everything from character sketches to splash panels to full pages, done in a style that wasn't quite manga, wasn't quite comic book.
Kelley Armstrong (The Summoning (Darkest Powers, #1))
If you just write the kinds of stories you think others will want to read, you'll be competing with cartoonists who are far more enthusiastic for that kind of comic than you are, and they'll kick your ass every time.
Scott McCloud (Making Comics: Storytelling Secrets of Comics, Manga and Graphic Novels)
Comics are drawings, not photographs, and as such they present a subjective view of reality.
Frederik L. Schodt (Dreamland Japan: Writings on Modern Manga)
Japan is the first nation in the world to accord 'comic books'--originally a 'humorous' form of entertainment mainly for young people--nearly the same social status as novels and films.
Frederik L. Schodt (Dreamland Japan: Writings on Modern Manga)
Even if there are no new Mighty Atom manga or films created, the Mighty Atom character has become a permanent fixture of both Japanese and global pop culture.
Frederik L. Schodt (The Astro Boy Essays: Osamu Tezuka, Mighty Atom, and the Manga/Anime Revolution)
Manga and graphic novels are not just for kids; they are a form of art and literature that can be appreciated by people of all ages.
Unknown
show it.
Comfort Love (The Complete Guide to Self-Publishing Comics: How to Create and Sell Comic Books, Manga, and Webcomics)
Some Western readers commonly use the Japanese word manga to mean serious comic-book literature. According to one of my Japanese friends, this usage is wrong. The word manga means “idle picture” and is used in Japan to describe collections of trivial comic-book stories. The correct word for serious comic-book literature is gekiga, meaning “dramatic picture.
Freeman Dyson (Dreams of Earth and Sky)
In that sense, “otaku” referred to a sudden, spontaneous, and, to most Japanese, inexplicable eruption of extreme obsessiveness among the country’s youth. One day, Japanese in their teens and twenties were normal, well-adjusted young people. The next day, or so it seemed, they were hopeless geeks who had forsaken all social skills in favor of a deep dive into—whatever. Manga (comics). Anime. Super-hard-core deviant anime porn in which tender young schoolgirls are violated by multi-tentacled octopi. Trains. It could be anything really.
Frank Rose (The Art of Immersion: How the Digital Generation Is Remaking Hollywood, Madison Avenue, and the Way We Tell Stories)
Chapter 3 Reading Kindle Documents Understanding Kindle display technology Customizing your text display Comic and manga books Children's books Zooming images Panning tables Enhanced viewing mode Interacting with your documents X-Ray Vocabulary Builder Kindle FreeTime Goodreads on Kindle Time to Read Navigating a book Chapter 4
Amazon (Kindle Paperwhite User's Guide 2nd Edition)
Semua makhluk hidup setiap harinya hidup seperti memutar roda keberuntungan.
Okai Haruko (Waikiki Restaurant in Enoshima vol. 04 (Waikiki Restaurant in Enoshima, # 4))
Comic and manga
Amazon (Kindle Paperwhite User's Guide)
Comics in the United States have become such a caricature. You have to have incredible people doing incredible things, but in Japan it seems like the most popular comics are the comics of normal people doing normal things.
Frederik L. Schodt (Dreamland Japan: Writings on Modern Manga)
Table of Contents Chapter 1 Getting Started Setting up your Kindle Kindle controls Status indicators Keyboard Network connectivity VoiceView screen reader Special Offers and Sponsored Screensavers Chapter 2 Navigating Your Kindle The Kindle Home screen Toolbars Tap zones Chapter 3 Acquiring & Managing Kindle Content Shop the Kindle Store anytime, anywhere Recommended content Device and Cloud storage Removing items from your Kindle Managing your Kindle Library Chapter 4 Reading Kindle Documents Understanding Kindle display technology Customizing your text display Comic and manga books Children's books Images Tables Interacting with your documents Chapter 5 Features X-Ray Word Wise Vocabulary Builder Kindle FreeTime (Kindle for Kids in the UK) Managing your Amazon household Goodreads on Kindle Time to Read Chapter 6 Getting More from Your Kindle Carrying and reading personal documents Reading Kindle content on other devices Sharing Using your Kindle with your computer Using the Experimental Web Browser Chapter 7 Settings Customizing your Kindle settings The Settings contextual menu Chapter 8 Finding Additional Assistance
Amazon (Kindle User's Guide)
people
Karla Stewart (Drawing: Becoming A Drawing Master - Learn How Sketch, Draw Manga, Comics, Cartoons And Much More!)
I keep telling my kids, if they want to learn to sing, or to tap dance, or draw manga comics, or to do anything, learn everything you can about all the masters in your field over the past 100 years.
James Altucher (Reinvent Yourself)
I'm just a ghost passing by~ teehee~
Ghostmaya (Oh My Ghost Webtoon)
Manga is a highly respected form of storytelling. Calling it comics doesn’t do it justice. I’ll sort her out with some other graphic novels, too. It’s all stories. It all counts.
Poppy Alexander (The Littlest Library)
I'M AN OTAKU. Are you? You say English, We say Japanese. You say Cars, We say Nyan Cat. :D You say Justin Beiber, We say Vocaloid. -.- You say Swords, We say Bleach. You say Reality, We say Anime. You say Comics, We say Manga. You say countries, We say Hetalia. You say Hello, We say こんにちは (Konnichiwa). You learn Japanese from classes, We learn from shows. You cry if a character dies, We have a rainbow of emotions. You only feel what your favorite person feels, We feel what everyone else is feeling. You crush on popstars, We crush on anime characters. You think we're crazy, We just think you're normal. You say Crazy, We say Soul Eater. You say ocean, We say ONE PIECE!!! You say family, We say FAIRY TAIL!!! You say Ninja, We say Naruto. You say Rabbits, We say Flying Mint Bunny. You think we're fangirls/fanboys, but we're all OTAKU'S, Re-Post if Your and OTAKU and PROUND!
Anonymous
Manga represents and extremely unfiltered view of the inner workings of their creator's minds. This is because manga are free of the massive editing and "committee"-style production used in other media like film, magazines and television. Even in American mainstream comics, the norm is to have a stable of artists, letterers, inkers, and scenario writers all under the control of the publisher. In Japan, a single artist might employ many assistants and act as a sort of "director," but he or she is usually at the core of the production process and retains control over the rights to the material created. That artists are not necessarily highly educated and deal frequently in plain subject matter only heightens the sense that manga offer the reader an extremely raw and personal view of the world. Thus, of the more than 2 billion manga produced each year, the vast majority have a dreamlike quality. They speak to people's hope, and fears. They are where stressed-out modern urbanites daily work out their neuroses and their frustrations. Viewed in their totality, the phenomenal number of stories produced is like the constant chatter of the collective unconscious -- and articulation of the dream world. Reading manga is like peering into the unvarnished, unretouched reality of the Japanese mind.
Frederik L. Schodt (Dreamland Japan: Writings on Modern Manga)
A picture is worth a thousand words, but a comic is worth a million.
Stan Lee
I am not reducing your budget, Kevin. Your budget—which last I checked is like twenty bucks, some chewing gum, and a stack of anime comics—is secure.” “Um, it’s called manga.” She gave him the side-eye. “What is?” “Japanese comics. Anime is animation.” “Oh my God, I don’t care.
Craig Schaefer (Black Tie Required (Harmony Black, #6))
For my future bride,” Church says, appearing on my left and handing over an iced coffee while Ranger shoves a freshly baked and carefully wrapped muffin into the front pocket of my bag. “Why, thank you, sirs,” I say as I hook my arm with Spencer’s. “And because I knew they’d be trying to butter you up this morning …” he says, reaching into his own bag and grabbing a book. He slips it into mine as I cock a brow at him. Pulling the book out and opening it, I see that it’s a manga—a Japanese anime comic—and that it has … it has … My eye twitches. “There’s so much sex in this book,” I choke out as I try to hand it back to him and he dances out of my way, laughing and folding his arms together behind his head. “God, Chuck, stop it, I don’t want your dirty gay porn mag!” “Spencer Hargrove!
C.M. Stunich (The Forever Crew (Adamson All-Boys Academy, #3))
Revenge of the Heiress in Distress - Chapter 1
Nawab faisal
We all like to complain about movies, shows, comics, and the like. This is your chance to put your money where your mouth is! Instead of complaining about what bad stories there are, create something better yourself.
Comfort Love (The Complete Guide to Self-Publishing Comics: How to Create and Sell Comic Books, Manga, and Webcomics)
Why is research important? Because our readers can tell when we don’t care enough to do the most basic work of telling a good story.
Comfort Love (The Complete Guide to Self-Publishing Comics: How to Create and Sell Comic Books, Manga, and Webcomics)
If a Tokyoite knows anything about Nakano, it's likely to be Nakano Broadway, a shopping mall with several floors devoted to Japanese comics (manga) and animation (anime). It is geek central. I found most of it incomprehensible, but I did enjoy browsing at Junkworld, which sells useful electronic discards, like old working digital cameras for $5 and assorted connectors and dongles and sound cards. In the 1980's, when William Gibson was padding around the streets of Tokyo and inventing the world of Neuromancer, Japan was the place where the future had already arrived, where you could find electronic toys that wouldn't hit American shelves for years, if ever. For a variety of reasons (blogs and online shopping, advances in international shipping, the fact that the coolest mobile phones are now designed in Silicon Valley and Seoul), this is no longer true. While it's still fun to go to Akihabara at night and shop all seven floors of a neon-lit electronics superstore, you won't bring home any objects of nerdy wet dreams.
Matthew Amster-Burton (Pretty Good Number One: An American Family Eats Tokyo)
Find the heart of your story by writing down in one sentence what your protagonist wants and what’s in the way. What specific emotion( s) does that sentence spark in you? That’s your theme. “The price of freedom.”“The pain of loss.” Whatever.
Comfort Love (The Complete Guide to Self-Publishing Comics: How to Create and Sell Comic Books, Manga, and Webcomics)
Globalization has not left comics untouched.
Comfort Love (The Complete Guide to Self-Publishing Comics: How to Create and Sell Comic Books, Manga, and Webcomics)
The world changed and the companies haven’t yet figured out how to exploit it, exactly. Twilight and Harry Potter and manga have shown females will purchase genre books with a vengeance if given the opportunity and an enticing enough read.
Lynne M. Thomas (Chicks Dig Comics: A Celebration of Comic Books by the Women Who Love Them)