Kingyo Used Books (
Japanese: 金魚屋古書店,
Hepburn: Kingyoya Koshoten) is a Japanese
manga series written and illustrated by
Seimu Yoshizaki. It follows the happenings which revolve around a small used manga store, specializing in old and obscure manga. A first series, titled Kingyoya Koshoten Suitouchō, was published in
Shōnen Gahōsha's Young King OURs's special editions OURs Girl and OURs Lite from 2000 to 2002, with its chapters collected in two volumes. Kingyo Used Books was serialized in
Shogakukanseinen manga magazine Monthly Ikki from 2004 to 2014, when the magazine ceased its publication. It was then published via compiled volumes, with the final volume released in 2020. The series is collected into seventeen tankōbon volumes. Kingyo Used Books was licensed in North America by
Viz Media under their Viz Signature Ikki label.
Plot
The story revolves around a used manga store, and has a series of
vignette-style chapters revolving around different characters. It extols the value of reading manga in one's life, and is notable for having references to several well-known, as well as obscure manga, from the smash-hit Dr. Slump, to the rarely heard-of Billy Puck.
Publication
Kingyo Used Books is written and illustrated by Seimu Yoshizaki. Yoshizaki first launched a series titled Kingyoya Koshoten Suitouchō (金魚屋古書店出納帳), which was published from 2000 to 2002 in
Shōnen Gahōsha's Young King OURs's special editions OURs Girl and OURs Lite.[3][4] Two volumes were published on April 3 and June 26, 2003.[5][6] Both volumes were re-released by
Shogakukan on December 24, 2004.[7][8]Kingyo Used Books was serialized in Shogakukan's
seinen manga magazine Monthly Ikki from March 25, 2004,[9] to September 25, 2014, when the magazine ceased publication.[10] The series was then continued via compiled volumes.[11][12][13] The chapters were collected in seventeen tankōbon volumes, released from December 24, 2004,[14] to July 30, 2020.[15]
In North America, the series has been licensed by
Viz Media for English language release and it debuted on Monthly Ikki's English website Sigikki on July 30, 2009.[16] Only four volumes were released from April 20, 2010,[17] to October 18, 2011.[18]
Carlo Santos in his
Anime News Network column "Right Turn Only" gave the manga a grade of "B", saying that "if you want to get a non-manga fan into manga, this is probably not the manga to give them." The critic went on to say, "Kingyo is, if anything, too fixated on giving history lessons, trying to drown the reader in footnotes and details rather than letting the series speak for itself."[37]