Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Manga. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Manga Quotes And Sayings by 87 Authors including Megan Fox,Muriel Barbery,Gloria Steinem,Troy Duffy,Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa for you to enjoy and share.
I love comic books. I just do.
Tea and mangas instead of coffee and newspapers: something elegant and enchanting, instead of adult power struggles and their sad aggressiveness.
For the reader who has put away comic books, but isn't yet ready for editorials in the Daily News.
Ultimately, there's always been a link between comic books and video games, and comic books and movies, and then basically all three steadily becoming this sort of transmedia.
I grew up reading comic books. Super hero comic books, Archie comic books, horror comic books, you name it.
I just love comic books. I've always loved comic book art, and I just think it's amazing.
I'm a big fan of martial arts films, novels and radio programs.
Comics are such a powerful educational tool. Simply put, there are certain kinds of information that are best communicated through sequential visuals.
I love comic books - maybe to a fault sometimes.
I'm pretty illiterate when it comes to comics history.
Comics are cool. I read 'Batman' and 'Spawn'.
You know, I read graphic novels but not encyclopedically.
Comics as art. I do comics as comics, and my opportunity to tell stories. Simple. Basic. Let the characters have the excitement, not the package. That's where I come from.
As a kid, I was a big comic fan and I liked foreign comics as well.
Comics are an international language, they can cross boundaries and generations. Comics are a bridge between all cultures.
I have to read comic books all first, because now when you get into graphic novels, they are definitely in deep graphic.
There are certain comics that just seem like they have this perfect balance between dialogue and image that I can't not read. I'll want to save it for later, and the next thing I know, I'm reading it. That's what I'm kind of trying to do with my comics.
My work looks like a comic book in form, but it's not a typical comic book in content. I write autobiographical stuff.
I know as a child, I was really interested in becoming a manga artist, to create my own stories and illustrate them and present something that people would be interested in reading and looking at as well.
I am fanatic book lover.
The way I process things, they way I express myself, is in comics, just as poets process things that they are trying to understand.
The message is that if you believe in what you create, it's enjoyable and people will follow. The talented mangaka should know that; otherwise, no one would read or enjoy it. So believe in yourself. Believing in yourself is important.
I love comic books. I was weaned on them, so it's not like it's a stretch for me, but I have other interests, as well.
What do I most look forward to when creating manga? Why, doing the bonus pages, of course! I wish I could just do a whole 180 of nothing but bonus pages!
I'm not the biggest comic book fan.
I think reading has got so many more enemies now that graphic novels have kind of flipped over to that side.
At any comic book convention in America, you'll find aspiring cartoonists with dozens of complex plot ideas and armloads of character sketches. Only a small percentage ever move from those ideas and sketches to a finished book.
I have a great affection for comics, and I think that people underrate comics as a genre.
At the end of the '60s, I was trying to enter the world of comics.
A novelist can't be without a kimono and pen!(Shigure)
I've always loved comic books. As a kid, I used to read cowboy stories and historical comics about other worlds, unknown places that would take me out of myself and which helped to develop my imagination.
I love comics. I like to do everything I used to do when I was 14-years-old.
Minho looks like a main character of a manga.
You know, I've never been a comic book person, just because that's not my gig and I don't have a television.
The comics work is very slow, and it basically involves working for sometimes years in isolation and not knowing how the work is going to be received.
Motion comics take the underlying physical book material and enhance or modify it slightly enough to make it unique and, we think, best-suited for a digital environment.
Who needs girls when you've got comics?
No matter how good a story is, if you're at a newsstand and you see a lot of comic books, you don't know how good the story is unless you read it. But you can spot the artwork instantly, and you know whether you like the artwork, whether it grabs you or not.
When I was very young, before I could read, I remember being very interested in comic books.
'Female Convict 701: Scorpion' is based on a manga as is 'Lady Snowblood.' I saw 'Lady Snowblood' in the theater between writing issue three and issue four of the first arc of 'Pretty Deadly,' and I was really surprised how much I was influenced by it.
I'm not opposed to comics on the Internet. It's just not interesting to me.
All the pictures I could never do, I'll do it in comics. All the comics I do are the pictures I could never do.
In the early '90s, I was finishing up my adolescence. I visited my local comic-book store on a weekly basis, and one week I found a book on the stands called 'Xombi,' published by Milestone Media.
Most normal boys, as they're growing up, they - in order to become attractive, they might, you know, get good at sports or join a rock band or develop good social skills, and for some reason, I thought that drawing comic books might be my route.
I just really respond to comics. I find it a really exciting medium.
Once I found out that I was playing 'Deathlok,' I unearthed my old comic book collection. I was going home for Christmas, and I have a collection of thousands of comics. I was surprised to see that 90% of them were Marvel. So, I wanted to go through my collection and start there.
Something: the BookBook-- Ted Stetson
I think the 'Boxers' book was easier for me to envision as a comic, because they were on this epic journey. These teenagers basically gathered into this army and marched to the capital city where they had a showdown with the Europeans and Japanese. On the 'Saints' side, it was a lot trickier.
I read comics and stuff. I buy a lot of comics, a lot of films and boxsets.
My overall artistic goal is to marry graphic design with comic books and traditional storytelling.
I'm a fan myself, so I try to write the kind of comics I want to read.
Comics are really my life blood in a lot of respects.
I'm a big fan of a lot of graphic novels - 'Fables,' 'Y: The Last Man' and 'The Walking Dead,' which I like a lot more.
I originally thought I'd be an ordinary business man, but I really like art, so that's how I became a manga artist.
I am a big fan of the web comic 'Strong Female Protagonist,' illustrated by Molly Ostertag.
I've always had a soft spot for comic books.
Mega biblion, mega kakon (Big book, big evil)
All of the stuff I can't afford to do on a TV budget, I just put into the comic book because you're really only limited in a comic by your artist's imagination.
Comics, for me, is being able to sing alone in the shower. I find it freeing. You just pick up a pen and get to it.
I love comic books and always did as a kid.
Narrative art, the novel, from Murasaki to Proust, has produced great works of poetry.
I love print fiction, but sometimes when I'm reading a good graphic novel or manga, I find myself envying those who work in an illustrated format.
With comics you can put interesting and solid information in a format that's pretty palatable.
Look, I had a passion for comic books growing up.
I'm totally addicted to Japanese anime and spend way, way, way too much time watching it.
I really like the look of old '70s and '80s Japanese comics, so I think that style is something I will continue to draw.
One of the best things about reading comic books, when you're a kid or an adult, is watching the characters cross-over. What happens in one book affects the other, and these shows are so tightly knit that it feels like one giant show.
Our hope is that the elementary reading of comics will lead to the joy of reading good books.
Over at Marvel, I have a five-part series coming out very soon. The books or chapters will appear weekly. It's called '5 Ronin' and features some iconic Marvel heroes as you've never seen them.
Comics are carried by characters. If a character is well-created, the comic becomes a hit.
The graphic style itself is influenced by a lot of very layered and detailed comics that I read as a kid, like 'Vagabond' by Takehiko Inoue.
I am an avid reader of comics, though I came to them late.
PROLOGUE CHAPTER
Comics were going down for the second time and here, all of a sudden, came this thing and for the next fifteen years, romance comics were about the top sellers in the field; they outsold everything.
Comic books are what novels used to be - an accessible, vernacular form with mass appeal - and if the highbrows are right, they're a form perfectly suited to our dumbed-down culture and collective attention deficit.
I have to confess I'm not a huge comics fan in the wider sense of comics as an art form.
Comics is all about making it believable and helping people to get completely lost in a fictional world.
There seems to be a peculiar kind of clamor for comics. And I'm not sure how much a part of reality that is. I think partly it's based on some idea that comics are what everybody wants to read - and I don't think that's the case.
I've loved comics since I was very young, and I've always liked telling stories.
I'm never quite sure what I'm looking for in a comic book! It just jumps off the page somehow and hits you square between the eyeballs and you know that's the artist for the story.
I love comic books. Since I was a kid, I've collected them.
I am someone who, from a very young age, was a huge fan of DC Comics.
I'm a severe graphic novels junkie. People ask me about it, and I say I like the graphic novels. Comic books are for kids, and graphic novels are for adults. But you can't really separate the two.
I like learning things, and I like that writing comics is an excuse to look into new stuff and research and learn new things and hopefully put them in books.
I'm a comic nerd. I'm a former serious collector for much of my childhood and early teen years I wanted to draw underground comics.
My brother is a comic-book writer, and I was always in love with comics.
I read comic books and stuff but I didn't know a lot about it.
I'm really inspired by the show 'Future Boy Conan' from the '70s. It's a really beautiful show, and I love shonen anime and shojo anime, and I like the thought of mixing them together.
I do enjoy manga but would not consider myself a 'super-fan,' only really connecting with certain works such as 'Lone Wolf and Cub,' or 'Tekkon Kinkreet,' the more breakthrough works, and 'Akira,' to me, is the daddy of them all.
I've loved comics since I was a kid, collected them, I've always dreamed of being involved in comics.
I think a lot of the things in my life that I become most passionate about, and most excited about, are all from comics.
I've gotten more and more cut off from the regular comic-book world, from straight comics and stuff like that. Once in a while, I'll take a look at something.
You know, I'm a big comic book fan. As a kid I used to collect them until there was a horrible mudslide in Hollywood and I lost my collection, but I was also at an early age the voice of 'Jonny Quest;' it was a cartoon; so I am kind of a latent fan boy.
I love comics. All I've been doing is reading every day, sitting in the house. Because I've not been feeling too good, so I've been reading and reading.
A lot of the ways that I like to approach comic books, or anything like that, is not just the book itself, but the fans of it, the readers, the world that exists around it as a cultural object.
Some of my earliest work was in comics. I tend to think in pictures and always like to write scenes possessing the dynamic you find in comics.
Comics can be pernicious, fascist propaganda or anti-authoritarian. The ones that shaped me were particularly anti-authoritarian.
Obviously, I love superheroes; I love comic book characters, but I ... I guess I've had a lifelong affection for comics, and while I love the characters so much, I also love the medium.
Comic books were telling me what life was about. This was how I kind of entered life, through fiction.
I was into comic books as a kid.