| Nanase | |
|---|---|
![]() First English edition of Telepathic Wanderers, published by Tokyopop on November 8, 2005 |
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| Genre | Drama, Psychological, Supernatural |
| Manga | |
| Author | Yasutaka Tsutsui |
| Illustrator | Sayaka Yamazaki |
| Publisher | Kodansha |
| English publisher | |
| Demographic | Shōnen |
| Original run | September 6, 2001 – March 6, 2003 |
| Volumes | 4 |
Telepathic Wanderers (Nanase) is a Japanese manga written by Yasutaka Tsutsui and illustrated by Sayaka Yamazaki. The manga is licensed in English by Tokyopop.[1] The manga is based on Yasutaka Tsutsui's novel, Nanase Futatabi.[2]
Contents |
Kodansha released the manga's 4 bound volumes between September 6, 2001 and March 6, 2003.[3][4] Tokyopop released the manga's 4 bound volumes between November 8, 2005 and October 31, 2006.[5][6]
| No. | Japanese | English | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Release date | ISBN | Release date | ISBN | |
| 1 | September 6, 2001[3] | ISBN 978-4-06-336979-3 | November 8, 2005[5] | ISBN 978-1-59-532938-7 |
| 2 | March 6, 2002[7] | ISBN 978-4-06-361026-0 | March 7, 2006[8] | ISBN 978-1-59-532939-4 |
| 3 | December 26, 2002[9] | ISBN 978-4-06-361090-1 | July 3, 2006[10] | ISBN 978-1-59-532940-0 |
| 4 | March 6, 2003[4] | ISBN 978-4-06-361134-2 | October 31, 2006[6] | ISBN 978-1-59-532941-7 |
Anime News Network's Theorin Martin commends the manga for "solid storytelling and goodly amounts of fan services."[11] Anime News Network's Theorin Martin commends the manga for its artwork but criticises the manga for bring "overly dramatic in normal speech."[12] IGN commends the manga for its art and Japan's Isaac Asimov, Yasutaka Tsutsui, for his storytelling.[13] Mania.com's Jarred Pine commends the manga for its "good entry into the mystery, psychological thriller genre".[14]
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