Koimoku

Koimoku (Japanese: こいもく, Spelled as Cimoc in the English subtitle) is a manga series written by Dall-Young Lim and illustrated by Hae-Won Lee. The series revolves around Kouta Inamine, a young manga artist whose streak of failures takes a drastic turn when he is hired by a famous B-rated editor.

Koimoku
Cover of Koimoku Volume 1 as released by Kill Time Communication featuring Hinata Sawanoguchi.
こいもく
GenreComedy, Romance, Drama, Slice-of-life
Manga
Written byDall-Young Lim
Illustrated byHae-Won Lee
Published byKill Time Communication
MagazineComic Valkyrie
DemographicSeinen
Original runJanuary 27, 2011September 27, 2012
Volumes5

Koimoku began serialization in the March 2011 issue of Kill Time Communication's seinen manga magazine Comic Valkyrie, published on January 27, 2011,[1] and ended in the November 2012 issue.[2] The first volume was released on July 27, 2011, and the fifth and final volume released on November 29, 2012.

Plot

Kouta Inamine is a young man with dreams of becoming a professional manga artist, but his constant mistakes has caused him to be fired from almost every manga magazine in Tokyo. After being fired from yet another manga magazine, he believes his life to be over. However, his life takes a drastic turn when he finds out that his next door neighbor, Hinata Sawanoguchi, is revealed to be a famous editor for a B-rated manga magazine, and Hinata recruits him for her manga magazine. The story mainly focuses on the process of making and serializing manga, from concept to completion and the real-life stresses that come with it, with a comedic touch.

Characters

Main characters

Kouta Inamine (稲峰 耕太, Inamine Kōta)
A 20 year-old man and a manga artist who moved to Tokyo two years prior to fulfill his lifelong dream of becoming a successful manga author, but is occasionally fired from each manga magazine. He is then recruited to Comic Splash by his next door neighbor Hinata after he was fired from Comic Heat. He is revealed to be a virgin, and as a result has poor experience with women. It is revealed by Hinata that Kouta is a "trigger-type" artist, an artist who can produce amazing results if something stimulates them (sexual or otherwise).[3] This ability was first shown after Kouta saw Mika Fujiwara's breasts once, which inspired him to draw more buxom women for his manga. He was influenced to become a manga artist since childhood, and was influenced by Ozma's works. Five years later, he has become a successful manga artist and is married to Sayaka Jumonji, who is also his editor, and they are expecting a child.
Hinata Sawanoguchi (沢野口 日向, Sawanoguchi Hinata)
Kouta's busty next door neighbor and the editor-in-chief of Comic Splash (コミックスプラッシュ, Komikku Spurasshu), a B-rated seinen manga magazine. She shows two sides to herself: a ditzy woman outside of work and a serious editor at work. Prior to recruiting Kouta, Hinata gave Ryujirou Mine, one of Kouta's superiors, his big break at Comic Splash before he became a ten million seller. The rumors of Hinata's sexual appetite, which started when she managed Mine's debut work "Farewell, Tokyo", are based on the fact that Hinata pokes excessively into the private lives of her signed manga artists. Hinata also has a reputation as a novice eater who pushes her artists to the utmost extreme and burning most of them out for every star she produces, and making them change their style to make it more market-friendly instead of having more fidelity to their personal tastes.
It is revealed in chapter 8 that she had her career ruined following an incident with a famous manga author (Ozma, later revealed to be Omura), but she assented to it. At the time, she was always called in by top magazines and stole promising newbies, afterwards she worked at lower grade magazines.[4] It is later revealed that she was Ozma's mentor in the past, and her teachings later became a base for his management system upon founding his studio.[5]
Miki Fujiwara (藤原 美樹, Fujiwara Miki)
A bespectacled girl who works at Comfy's, a dating club, where she assumes a kogal/ganguro appearance. Originally called by Kouta to improve his experience with women, she takes an interest in Kouta's manga upon seeing his unfinished manuscript, even proclaiming herself to be his "number-one fan".
Chika Sakomizu (迫水 千佳, Sakomizu Chika)
A girl hired by Hinata as Kouta's assistant. Despite her childlike appearance, she is actually 20 years old and currently attending college. She has a fiery temper and dislikes being called a little girl. Initially Kouta was skeptical about her expertise in manga, but after seeing her superb artwork, he eventually hires her as his assistant. She is nicknamed "Chi-chan" by Hinata, and appears to be acquainted with her. She has a habit of kicking Kouta in the groin whenever he touches her hands or sees her underwear.

Comic Heat staff

Tohru Asahina (朝比奈 徹, Asahina Tōru)
An editorial staff member for the shōnen manga magazine Comic Heat (コミックヒート, Komikku Hīto) and Kouta's former colleague.
Sayaka Jumonji (十文字 さやか, Jūmonji Sayaka)
The editor-in-chief of Comic Heat and Tohru's superior. She is Hinata's rival who disapproves of her methods of molding manga artists, believing that they should be successful in their own right and that there were a number of artists under her wing that failed to be successful, which is negatively affecting the manga industry. It is revealed that she once worked with Hinata in the past for a manga magazine, though the main reason for her breaking up with Hinata remains unknown.[6] Despite her rivalry, she still has some degree of respect for Hinata, as she refers to her by the senpai honorific. She can also be quite intimidating, especially towards Tohru. Five years later, she is Kouta's editor as well as his wife, and the couple are expecting their first child together.
Ryujirou Mine (峰 龍二郎, Mine Ryūjirō)
A critically acclaimed author who can sell ten million copies of his manga once it hits print, earning him a spot in the Ten-Million Club (千万クラブ, Senman Kurabu). He briefly hired Kouta as an assistant, but quickly fired him following an ink spill which ruined one of his pages, claiming he does not have what it takes to be a manga author (he admits later on that he is a bit hotheaded when it comes to manga) and explaining to him the realities of the manga industry. It is revealed by Izumi that he was a former employee of Comic Splash, and was Hinata's disciple. Hinata gave Mine his big break on his debut manga "Farewell, Tokyo" which sold 30 million copies, which in turn led to the spread of numerous rumors by her competitors. It is later revealed that Hinata (who was a manager at the time as well as his editor) had collaborated with him on his debut work.
Yū Takashima
A staff editor for Comic Heat.

Comic Splash staff

Izumi Honda (Honda Izumi)
A member of Comic Splash's editing apartment.

Ozma Studio

Shogo Omura (大村, Ōmura Shōgo)
A famous manga artist who goes by the pen name Ozma (Stylized as OZMA[3]) and the first manga artist Hinata managed. He is the founder of Ozma Studio and his Ozma System, the director system, which is based on Hinata's teachings. Omura worked exceedingly hard, being Sawanoguchi's debut solely-managed manga artist. His works and common elements inspired Kouta to be a manga artist himself. It is revealed that when Omura was Hinata's protege, they eventually fell in love. Omura began to monopolize Hinata and when she refused, he slandered her, tarnishing her image.
Rune Iwasaki (岩崎 ルネ, Iwasaki Rune)
A girl whom Kouta met at a manga cafe after leaving his home following a fallout with Hinata. Like Kouta, she too, is a fan of Ozma's works. It is later revealed that she is the Chief of Ozma Studio and a fellow manga author, as well as the Art Director and author of Revolution x2 (also known as Revo Revo), one of Ozma's works.
Minako Aikawa (藍川 美奈子, Aikawa Minako)

Other characters

Rinne Kagami (鏡 リンネ, Kagami Rinne)

Volumes

Written by Korean manhwa author Dall-Young Lim and illustrated by Hae-Won Lee, Koimoku began serialization in Kill Time Communication's seinen manga magazine Comic Valkyrie in its March 2011 issue (published on January 27, 2011),[1] and ended in the November 2012 issue (published on September 27, 2012) with twenty chapters published.[2] The first volume was released on July 27, 2011 under KTC's Valkyrie Comics imprint,[7] and the fifth and final volume was released on November 29, 2012.[8]

In South Korea, it is published by Artlim Media, and it is serialized in Comic GT.[9][10]

No.Release date ISBN
01 July 27, 2011[7]978-4-7992-0107-7
  • Chapters 1–4
02 October 27, 2011[11]978-4-7992-0152-7
  • Chapters 5–8
03 February 29, 2012[12]978-4-7992-0213-5
  • Chapters 9–11
04 June 27, 2012[13]978-4-7992-0276-0
  • Chapters 12–15
05 November 29, 2012[8]978-4-7992-0348-4
  • Chapters 16–20
gollark: Maaaaybe they could just not burn things in general?
gollark: I'm hoping people will get more used to not having to actually be physically at some place to work.
gollark: It should probably be "other than that they are lazy", but... again, does it matter?
gollark: Technically, it's a group of people then a verb in a contracted form.
gollark: It is they're, but who cares.

References

  1. "コミックヴァルキリー Vol.28" [Comic Valkyrie Vol.28] (in Japanese). Kill Time Communications. Retrieved July 16, 2011.
  2. "コミックヴァルキリー Vol.40" [Comic Valkyrie Vol.40] (in Japanese). Kill Time Communications. Archived from the original on November 8, 2012. Retrieved November 5, 2012.
  3. Koimoku; Volume 2, Chapter 5
  4. Koimoku; Volume 2, Chapter 8
  5. Koimoku; Volume 4, Chapter 13
  6. Koimoku; Volume 2, Chapter 6
  7. こいもく 1 [Koimoku 1] (in Japanese). Amazon.com. Retrieved July 16, 2011.
  8. こいもく 5 [Koimoku 5] (in Japanese). Amazon.com. Retrieved November 5, 2012.
  9. "Official Artlim Koimoku Page" (in Korean). Artlim Media. Retrieved 2012-05-14.
  10. "코믹GT 창간준비호" (in Korean). Archived from the original on 2012-07-12. Retrieved 2012-05-14.
  11. こいもく 2 [Koimoku 2] (in Japanese). Amazon.com. Retrieved September 1, 2011.
  12. こいもく 3 [Koimoku 3] (in Japanese). Amazon.com. Retrieved February 24, 2012.
  13. こいもく 4 [Koimoku 4] (in Japanese). Amazon.com. Retrieved June 23, 2012.
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