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Home » Features » So You Want to Start Reading Manga?

So You Want to Start Reading Manga?

Kate SánchezBy Kate Sánchez04/05/20208 Mins ReadUpdated:12/24/2023
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I’ve been reading manga since I was about ten years old. Back then, we relied on crowdsourced translations that weren’t readily available. Then Barnes & Noble began to beef up their manga offering with the latest tankobon (volume) of titles that usually coincided with a popular anime at the time – something we can thank Toonami for. I mean, to read one volume of manga, I’d have to check back over and over. So, if you are jumping in today, there is more access to both manga and anime translations through official channels than ever before!

That said, even for regular comic book readers, manga can be intimidating to pick up and read for several reasons, with long-established titles like Naruto, Bleach, One Piece, and Dragon Ball being the most recognizable in the US while also numbering in the hundreds when it comes to chapters. It can feel overwhelming to jump in and just read manga. Throw in the fact that you have to read right to left, and some titles remain in the original Japanese. I can see why some are hesitant to pick up their first manga.

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But fear not! I have a few tips to help you just pick up and read manga that will hopefully help you feel less overwhelmed. Like American comic books, manga is so much more than just the titles currently reaching anime fame. While those are great, their chapter count can be extremely long.

How Manga Works

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Manga generally consists of chapter form first. These chapters function a lot like American comic single issues and are usually published in a weekly or monthly publication like the iconic Shonen Jump or Shojo Beat, both of which are imprints of Viz Media as well, which allows for distribution in English or are independently distributed via webtoons platforms. While some chapters publish regularly, others may have gaps of time where they’re not updated. Then, chapters are collected into volumes called tankobon. These volumes can have three or more chapters, all dependent on how the arcs are structured and how to tell the story best. Normally, volumes are around 200 pages, similar to trade paperbacks of your favorite comics.

A lot of older manga have a single creator (who does both illustration and writing), unlike American comic books, which can have three or more people on a single issue. The status of a mangaka, a manga creator, usually means it’s a one-man or woman show. This is also the case for smaller Shonen titles while those with larger publishers have been changing, like My Hero Academia or Boruto, to include larger teams/ That said, knowing that it’s one person doing the work is an easy way to help you understand when chapters take a little bit longer to get released especially when published outside some of the large compilations.

Start With Something Familiar

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An easy way to jump into manga is to start with familiar territory. While this may be difficult for some larger titles like One Piece (I mean, there are 900 episodes of the anime, so one is a monster in all forms), it’s easier with shows that have one to a few seasons. You can make the choice to start from chapter one, or you can do what a lot of us do and watch the series to its current stop point and then jump into the manga pool from where the last arc ended.

This may seem weird, but normally, anime adapts manga well enough for you to understand what happens when you switch mediums. This will lower the number of chapters you need to read to catch up. For example, Beastars is a Netflix Original anime from studio Orange that has 12 episodes at around 25 minutes apiece. This one season collects chapters 1-50 of the manga, currently being released in the US by Viz Media. When I fell in love with the anime, I immediately looked up what chapter to pick up from. Additionally, there are also JRPGs that have manga adaptations, which can serve as a jumping-in point for gamers with titles like Persona 5 and even Splatoon.

Start with a Demographic

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Where American comics are sectioned into all ages, teen and mature, manga demographics are broken down by age and gender. I know, I know, it seems like a weird gender binary thing, but nowadays, mangaka uses the tropes established in these demographics to push boundaries of storytelling and in some cases, like My Hero Academia, reconstruct what we think about the existing category. There are four simple ones to start with: shonen, shojo, josei, and seinen.

Shonen is probably the most famous of the bunch, aimed towards a young male teen audience between the ages of 12 and 18. This is where Dragon Ball, Bleach, Naruto, and My Hero Academia fit in. In these stories, you’ll follow a usually young male protagonist as he harnesses his power, trains, goes on quests and features high action. Shonen can be sports anime like Haikyu, adventure anime like One Piece, and more. Now, this is a generalization, and the category encompasses things like Food Wars, Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure, and even titles like Spy X Family.

Meanwhile, Shojo is aimed at young women approximately 7–18 years old and gave birth to one of manga and anime’s most well-known genres: magical girl. Often focused on slice-of-life stories, romance, and magic, Shojo has exploded to include as much fantasy as romance and offers up stories that center women and girls as the protagonists.

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This is where the iconic Sailor Moon fits in, and it also features comedic love stories like Toradora! and My Little Monster. But if you’re into just romance, shojo also offers titles like Vampire Knight that fuses romance with fantasy and bits of horror. If you think this is too cutesy for you, do a deep dive into how Revolutionary Girl Utena broke gender norms and conceptions of sexuality in the 90s to get a full look at how shojo can do much more than just high school romance.

The final two big categories are seinen and josei, which take the components of shonen and shojo, respectively, and adjust the age ranges to include more mature audiences. Seinen manga is generally targeted at 18–30-year-old male audiences and includes stories that range from highly stylized avant-garde titles to explicit ones. But in it all, seinen focuses more on character development instead of action like its younger counterpart and usually ramps up things like violence and sexuality. Unlike Shonen, the protagonist can be either a woman or a man and include titles like Battle Royale, Berserk, Gantz, and Ghost in the Shell.

Josei, is the equivalent to seinen and targets women between 18 and 45 years old. The largest difference between Josei and its younger counterpart is the art. While shojo often uses an art style with large sparkling eyes, josei aims to show women in a more natural style, typically aiming to reflect more everyday women in Japan. Additionally, Josei romances showcase more realistic romances instead of idealized ones that are the focus of shojo. These stories include explicit intimacy and also show the uglier sides of romance like abuse, cheating, and so on. You’re OTP won’t kiss until the last chapter of a shojo but they will kiss in the first of josei, is the simplistic clarification between the two.

Grab a Shonen Jump Subscription

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With manga well into chapter 100, it can be difficult to find a place to jump in, especially when price points for physical manga volumes range between six to 10 dollars. The easiest way to catch up, try out new titles, and not worry about price is to pick up the Shonen Jump subscription from Viz Media. There are over 10,000 chapters available from the subscription and at only $2 a month, it’s a steal.

The subscription will also allow you to see how manga tackles different genres like sci-fi, fantasy, history, horror, and more. Additionally, while you can move towards staples like My Hero Academia, you can also branch out into lesser-known titles like Spy X Family, and find out what there is to read.

While there isn’t a shojo equivalent to Shonen Jump, you can get a ComiXology Unlimited subscription with our affiliate link, which offers up a smaller amount of manga titles but skews to more seinen and josei tastes, as well as having a wealth of classic manga titles.


Whether you’re new to manga but love anime or just new to Japanese pop culture in general, I hope you feel more comfortable finding a starting point to read manga. With so many manga stories out there, it’s a shame not to read them, and let’s be honest, American comic books are really intimidating. If you’ve made that jump, why not make it to Shonen Jump to read manga.

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Kate Sánchez
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Kate Sánchez is the Founder and Editor-in-Chief of But Why Tho? A Geek Community. There, she coordinates film, television, anime, and manga coverage. Kate is also a freelance journalist writing features on video games, anime, and film. Her focus as a critic is championing animation and international films and television series for inclusion in awards cycles. Find her on Bluesky @ohmymithrandir.bsky.social

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