Massive is composed of nine comics by prominent gay manga artists, each of which is accompanied by an interview with the artist.[2] The works included are:
Do You Remember South Island P.O.W. Camp? by
Gengoroh Tagame
Mr. Tokugawa Grade 5 Room 4 Homeroom Teacher by Seizoh Ebisubashi
A teacher with a high
sex drive is caught masturbating by a student's father and the school's janitor.
Yakuza Godfathers by Kazuhide Ichikawa
Two rival
yakuza bosses are drugged with a powerful
aphrodisiac by their gang members so they can reconcile their differences.
Manga artist Go Fujimoto was referenced in the tentative list of authors in early press materials for Massive, but does not appear in the anthology.[3]
Development and publication
Massive was conceived in 2012 when
Graham Kolbeins sought to interview gay manga creators for his personal blog, seeking assistance from
Anne Ishii for Japanese translation; Ishii had previously worked as a private translator for the gay manga collection of graphic designer
Chip Kidd.[4] Kolbeins, Ishii, and Kidd jointly pitched publisher
PictureBox for what would become two books: The Passion of Gengoroh Tagame: Master of Gay Erotic Manga, the first English-language book of works by
Gengoroh Tagame, and Massive.[4][5] Ishii and Kolbeins traveled to Japan to conduct interviews for the books, and concurrently launched
Massive Goods, a fashion brand and gay manga publisher.[4][6]
At the
Toronto Comic Arts Festival in May 2013, PictureBox formally announced that it would publish Massive for release in spring 2014.[3] Following the dissolution of PictureBox in December 2013,
Fantagraphics announced that it had acquired the license to the title,[7] which it published on December 18, 2014. To promote the release of the book, Jiraiya made his first-ever public appearance as an artist, attending signings and speaking events in Los Angeles, San Francisco, and New York.[8]
Reception
Massive was positively received by critics, and was nominated for Best Anthology at the
Eisner Awards in 2015.[9] Writer and editor
Shaenon K. Garrity called Massive "one of the best, not to mention one of the smuttiest, collections of manga ever published in the U.S." in her review of the anthology for Anime News Network.[2]Publishers Weekly called the anthology a "fascinating overview of contemporary gay manga and its creators",[1] while IndieWire praised Massive as an "intriguing insight into a segment of Japanese pop culture that’s virtually unknown in the West."[10]The A.V. Club characterized Massive as "more than just a collection of pornographic stories," noting that "just like any other great pieces of art, these stories are outlets for unbridled creative expression."[11]