Cookie is a Japanese josei manga magazine published bimonthly by Shueisha. As of 2008, the circulation is about 175,000.
Cookie is related to Ribon. Ribon Comic, a monthly magazine which was a sister magazine of Ribon, changed its title to Bouquet (ã¶ãã') in 1978. Bouquet stopped publication in March 2000.
In 1996, the Ribon editing department at Shueisha began publishing a manga magazine called Ribon Teens which featured a mixture of both the then-new and popular Ribon manga artists like Ai Yazawa, Miho Obana, and Mihona Fujii, and classic Ribon manga artists like Jun Hasegawa, Koi Ikeno, and Aoi Hiiragi. This magazine was published a couple of times in 1996 and 1997 before folding. In 1999, Shueisha revived the Ribon Teens concept in a new magazine which soon received the title Cookie. The first issue of Cookie was soon published and the second issue followed in 2000 and being published on the 26th of each month.
At that time, the former Bouquet editing department was made into the Cookie editing department. The editor-in-chief had been a former editor-in-chief of Ribon. Cookie began being published monthly starting from the May 2000 issue, and switched to being published bimonthly in July 2012.
Today, the manga artists featured in Cookie are a mixture of former Bouquet manga artists (some series that ran in Bouquet, such as Toriko Chiya's Clover and Yumi Ikefuji's Zoccha no Nichijou, were transferred to Cookie) and former Ribon manga artists such as Miho Obana and Ai Yazawa. There are also some new manga artists as well.
Perhaps the most popular manga in Cookie is Nana. It was one of the first manga to run in Cookie and still continues today, and is also being published in many other countries around the world.
Manga artists and series featured in Cookie
- Toriko Chiya
- Clover (originally serialized in Bouquet)
- Sakura Fujisue
- Ano Ko to Issho
- Akiko Higashimura
- Kisekae Yuka-chan
- Koi Ikeno
- Tokimeki Midnight
- Miho Obana
- Honey Bitter
- Ai Yazawa
- Nana
Related magazines
- Cookie Box
- Ribon
References
- ^ Japan Magazine Publishers Association Magazine Data 2008. The publication, which relies on information provided by publishers, categorizes Cookie as josei, but Shueisha's "S-MANGA.NET" site clearly categorizes that magazine as shÅjo, and it is therefore included here.
External links
- The official Cookie website (Japanese)
- Cookie page with galleries (Italian)
- Cookie (manga) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
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