Tatsuma Ejiri
Tatsuma Ejiri (江尻立真, Ejiri Tatsuma) is a Japanese manga artist from Kyoto Prefecture. After graduating from Kanazawa University he worked as a manga assistant for, among others, Eiichiro Oda and Jin Kobayashi. His first professionally published work was CHILDS published in the 1999 winter edition of Akamaru Jump. In 2006 his sports manga P2! -let's Play Pingpong!- was serialized in Weekly Shonen Jump. His latest work is Infini-T Force, which celebrates Tatsunoko Productions’ 55th anniversary and has been licensed in English by Udon Entertainment.[1]
Tatsuma Ejiri 江尻立真 | |
---|---|
Born | Tanabe, Kyoto Prefecture | June 18, 1975
Area(s) | Manga artist |
Notable works | P2! -let's Play Pingpong!- |
Works
- CHILDS (1999, Shueisha)
- Oasis Dancer (2000, Shueisha)
- World 4U (2003-2006, Shueisha)[2] - string of one-shots published between 2003 and 2014. Serialized in 'Jump Plus' (2014 - 2015)
- P2! -let's Play Pingpong!- (2006 – 2007 Shueisha)[2]
- Papa no Iu Koto o Kikinasai! - Sorairo no Hibiki (2011-ongoing, Shueisha) (illustrator)
- Ojarumaru (2012-2014, Shueisha)[3] -adaptation of the anime based on the original work of Rin Inumaru.
- Infini-T Force: Arc to the Future (Infini-T Force 未来の描線, Infini-T Force - Mirai no Byōsen) (2015–present), Shogakukan (illustrator).
gollark: Wait, where are the citations for the Haskell thing pointing to?
gollark: I do kind of know a bit of Haskell.
gollark: I saw the potatoes already.
gollark: Such as?
gollark: Is there anything interesting on my page?
References
- "Udon Licenses Infini-T Force Manga". Otaku Magazine USA. 21 June 2017.
- "Eyeshield 21's Murata to Do 1-Shot Window Washer Manga". Anime News Network. January 29, 2008. Retrieved July 4, 2010.
- "おじゃる丸 1". Amazon.jp.
External links
- Tatsuma Ejiri at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- Ejiri's Twitter Account (in Japanese)
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