Manga Volumes Free

  1. Manga Volumes Free Printable
  2. Bleach Manga Volumes
  3. Download Manga For Free
  4. Manga Volume Free Download

Top 25 Manga Sites To Read Manga Online For Free in 2020 Update on July 29, 2020. Rahab Njoroge Pronounced as ‘ maw-nnnn-gah Manga is the Japanese word, comprising of just three syllables, with the middle ‘n’ spoken very quickly.

Even the most dedicated manga fan can feel weak at the knees at the prospect of plunging into a 70-volume series (or even a relatively trim 20-volume one), and forget trying to convince someone unfamiliar with the medium to dive right into the deep end. Not all manga is interminable, however: many manga-ka can tell a satisfying story in a single volume, with a clearly defined beginning, middle, and end. What’s more, these creators often work in a style closer to American indie comics than the teen-genre stuff that clogs the manga shelves—although the lifestyles they depict are distinctly Japanese. If you can get the hang of reading right to left (really, it’s not hard), here are some single-volume manga to convince even the newbie to give manga a try.

Tropic of The Sea
  • History Talk (0) Share. NOTE: All chapter names are tentative based on translations and should not be considered the actual chapter name. Names will be updated as the official English translation is released. Volume 1: Doukyuusei: Chapter Titles 01 - Summer.
  • History Talk (0) Share. NOTE: All chapter names are tentative based on translations and should not be considered the actual chapter name.

Paperback$14.95

Tropic of the Sea, by Satoshi Kon
Satoshi Kon is best known as the director of such groundbreaking anime as Paprika, but before he went into filmmaking, he made manga—even serving for a while as assistant to Katsuhiro Otomo, creator of Akira. Tropic of the Sea is an environmental fable about a sleepy seaside village facing modernization. The hook here is that the townspeople have a tradition of caring for a mermaid’s egg; no one is sure if the legend is true or not, and the story splits between the true believers, the unbelievers, and the outsiders who see the whole mermaid thing as a tourist attraction. Kon draws his story in a simple, realistic style that nonetheless allows for the possibility of magic, even in everyday life.

Manga Volumes Free Printable

A Girl on the Shore

Paperback$18.95

A Girl on the Shore, by Inio Asano
Two teenagers start a relationship that’s purely sexual, but their feelings for each other become deeper even as they continue to deny them: that short summary doesn’t begin to do justice to Inio Asano’s intense, atmospheric story of a girl and a boy floating through life, betrayed by those close to them and bearing the burden of their own misdeeds. Asano is skilled at creating an entire world—the windswept beach in winter, the claustrophobic hubbub of the classroom, the loneliness of a crowded room. Much of the story unfolds in silent sequences, as we see the characters simply thinking or reacting, but Asano avoids the trap of being elliptical for its own sake; beneath the tears and long looks there is a solid story. This book is intense and beautiful, but take the 18+ rating seriously, as it includes a great deal of very explicit sex. Asano is also the creator of the one-shot manga Solanin and Nijigahara Holograph, as well as the series Goodnight Punpun, any of them a good fit for readers raised on comics from the American indie scene.

Manga foxHelter Skelter: Fashion Unfriendly

Paperback$16.95

Helter Skelter, by Kyoko Okazaki
Helter Skelter is drawn in a loose, hasty style reminiscent of fashion illustration; it’s appropriate, as it takes the extremes of the fashion industry as its subject matter. Liliko’s face is her fortune, literally—she’s a top model and has become accustomed to living in a certain way. But beauty is fleeting, and in order to keep herself looking good, she has to resort to multiple surgeries and treatments that ultimately cause her body to decay. When things start to fall apart—not just her body but her plan to marry a rich man—she does too, becoming increasingly abusive toward her long-suffering assistant and everyone else around her. Alongside this high drama, Okazaki weaves in a police procedural, as the local officials try to track down exactly what is going on at a beauty clinic. True to its name, Helter Skelter moves at an almost breathless pace, and it’s an entertaining story about ambition, depravity, and the dark underbelly of the fashion industry.

All My Darling Daughters

Paperback$12.99

All My Darling Daughters, by Fumi Yoshinaga
Yukiko and her mother Mari are a family of two, so they have always had a close (if sometimes quarrelsome) relationship. Then, after a bout with cancer, Mari announces that she is going to live life on her own terms—and for starters, she has just married a younger man. Younger than Yukiko, in fact. Yoshinaga shows Yukiko adjusting to this new reality and, in four other stories set in Yukiko’s world, explores the dilemmas and relationships of others as well. Yoshinaga is a skilled storyteller who is currently best known for her series What Did You Eat Yesterday? and like that book, All My Darling Daughters features many scenes of people eating and talking together. She favors a smooth, deceptively simple style, often placing her figures against blank backgrounds, which gives her art a monumental feel and also makes her manga fairly easy reading for newcomers to the medium.

Onward Towards Our Noble Deaths

Paperback$24.95

Onward Towards Our Noble Deaths, by Shigeru Mizuki
Mizuki’s Eisner Award-winning manga is a bit of a challenge for new readers thanks to the way he contrasts cartoony characters with detailed, photo-referenced backgrounds, but once you get used to it, the story is as compelling as it is horrifying. Mizuki drew on his own experiences in the Japanese army during World War II for this depiction of the desperate conditions the soldiers lived in as well as the different ways they persevered. When an infantry unit survives an almost pointless suicide charge, their leaders far from the front instruct them to do it again—and not to dare come back alive. Mizuki shows the leaders of the unit wrestling with the decision to place honor above human life, and the depravity and coarseness of everyday life in the jungle.

AnotherManga Volumes Free

Bleach Manga Volumes

Manga Volumes Free

Paperback$26.99| $30.00

Another, by Yukito Ayatsuji
There’s some sort of a curse on Class 3 of Yomiyama North Middle School: many years ago, a classmate was killed in an accident. The class was so traumatized that their reaction was just to deny reality and act as if she was still there. Years later, when they graduated…she was visible in the school picture. The setup of Another sounds like the sort of horror story you’d tell around a campfire, but it gets even creepier from there. Every few years, an extra student appears in the class, triggering a year of severe bad luck, with students and their families dying or suffering injuries in freak accidents. When out-of-towner Koichi Sakakibara transfers into the school, the class seems to be having one of those bad years—and they are determined to figure out who is to blame. Another is a ghost story with some serious mind games, and a single volume is the perfect way to read it, because you really won’t want to stop turning the pages. Ayatsuji has also written an Another novel, as well as Another Episode S/O, one more story set in the same world.

Sexy Voice and Robo

NOOK Book$10.99| $12.99

Sexy Voice and Robo, by Iou Kuroda
This fast-moving caper manga is long out of print, but still available on the Nook. Nico is a teenager with a side job working for a phone dating service, although her clients mostly seem to talk to her about other things. She’s not just earning some extra money, she’s honing her observational skills—she can identify her clients just from the sound of their voices, and has some keen insights into what their conversations reveal. It’s all part of her plan to be a spy someday. When an enigmatic old man starts hiring her for mysterious errands—get back a kidnapped boy, track down some stolen money—she puts her talents to good use. But since she’s only 14, she needs an adult with a car; enter Robo, one of her clients, a pleasant but rather clueless toy enthusiast (nothing racy here—we’re talking robots and model cars). Nico calls on Robo to help with her missions, always leading him on to think he’s going to meet a girl. Usually he doesn’t, although he does get lucky once. (Sort of.) Kuroda draws this manga in a loose, brushy, energetic style, with plenty of detail and contrast to create a truly dynamic look. The mix of mystery, action, and humor makes it a really good read.

Download Manga For Free

What one-and-done manga do you enjoy?

Manga Volume Free Download

Series by cover

Works (9)

TitlesOrder
Maximum Ride, Volume 1 [Manga] by Narae LeeVolume 1
Maximum Ride, Volume 2 [Manga] by Narae LeeVolume 2
Maximum Ride, Volume 3 [Manga] by Narae LeeVolume 3
Maximum Ride, Volume 4 [Manga] by Narae LeeVolume 4
Maximum Ride, Volume 5 [Manga] by Narae LeeVolume 5
Maximum Ride, Volume 6 [Manga] by Narae LeeVolume 6
Maximum Ride, Volume 7 [Manga] by Narae LeeVolume 7
Maximum Ride, Volume 8 [Manga] by Narae LeeVolume 8
Maximum Ride, Volume 9 [Manga] by Narae LeeVolume 9

Series Information

Translate Series Title

German
Dutch
French
Italian
Spanish
Finnish
Swedish
Brazilian Portuguese
Japanese
Norwegian
Polish
Afrikaans
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Basque
Belarusian
Bulgarian
Catalan
Croatian
Czech
Danish
Esperanto
Estonian
European Portuguese
Galician
Georgian
Gothic
Greek
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Korean
Latin
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Maori
Persian
Piratical
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Tagalog
Turkish
Urdu
Welsh
Yiddish

Series description

Related new series

Related people/characters

Related places

Related book awards

Series?!

How do series work?

To create a series or add a work to it, go to a 'work' page. The 'Common Knowledge' section now includes a 'Series' field. Enter the name of the series to add the book to it.

Works can belong to more than one series. In some cases, as with Chronicles of Narnia, disagreements about order necessitate the creation of more than one series.

Tip: If the series has an order, add a number or other descriptor in parenthesis after the series title (eg., 'Chronicles of Prydain (book 1)'). By default, it sorts by the number, or alphabetically if there is no number. If you want to force a particular order, use the | character to divide the number and the descriptor. So, '(0|prequel)' sorts by 0 under the label 'prequel.'

What isn't a series?

Series was designed to cover groups of books generally understood as such (see Wikipedia: Book series). Like many concepts in the book world, 'series' is a somewhat fluid and contested notion. A good rule of thumb is that series have a conventional name and are intentional creations, on the part of the author or publisher. For now, avoid forcing the issue with mere 'lists' of works possessing an arbitrary shared characteristic, such as relating to a particular place. Avoid series that cross authors, unless the authors were or became aware of the series identification (eg., avoid lumping Jane Austen with her continuators).

Also avoid publisher series, unless the publisher has a true monopoly over the 'works' in question. So, the Dummies guides are a series of works. But the Loeb Classical Library is a series of editions, not of works.