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Template:Short description Template:Infobox comics creator Template:Nihongo is a Japanese manga artist.[1]

Life

Okazaki started drawing in high school and submitted her illustrations to different magazines. For her, this was both a training for art school, which she wanted to apply for, and a way to make money from the prize money. She had saved more than 1 million yen when graduating from high school. The magazine Fanroad by the publisher Rapport published her first manga. She enrolled in and graduated from Tama Art University with a major in design. After university, she worked for the advertising company Hakuhodo, doing conceptual and design work.[1][2]

Her career as a manga artist became more successful in 1994, when she won a newcomers' award of Bouquet magazine, published the short story "Bathroom Gūwa" and started becoming a regular contributor for the magazine afterwards. Okazaki herself considers this to be her proper debut as a professional manga artist. She was a regular contributor for Cookie from its first issue, the successor to Bouquet. She continued working in advertising until 2001, when she decided to completely focus on her career as a manga artist.[1][3][4] Her first longer series was Suppli, which she published from 2003 to 2009 in the josei magazine Feel Young and which is set in an advertising company.[2] While working on Suppli, she gave birth to three children.[5]

Okazaki worked occasionally for seinen magazines already in the early 2000s. From 2014 to 2021, her first longer series for a seinen magazine was published in Monthly Big Comic Spirits, the historical manga A-un. The series based on the lives of Buddhist monks Kūkai and Saichō is her most critically acclaimed work so far. It was commended by manga authors Ryoko Yamagishi, Yuki Suetsugu and Masami Yuki and writers Rio Shimamoto and Kazuki Kaneshiro.[6] A-un was one of the Jury Recommended Works at the 23rd Japan Media Arts Festival in 2020.[7]

Several of her manga, among them Kanojo ga Shinjatta and Shibuya ku Maruyama cho, have been adapted as live-action films or TV series. Her work has been translated into English, French[8] and Polish.

Works

Title Year Notes Refs
Template:Nihongo 1988 Compiled in 1 vol.
Template:Nihongo 1994 Compiled in 1 vol.
Template:Nihongo 1998 Compiled in 1 vol.
BX 1999 Compiled in 1 vol.
Template:Nihongo 2000 Short story collection published by Shueisha in 1 vol.
Template:Nihongo 2000–01 Serialized in Business Jump
compiled in 2 vol.
Template:Nihongo 2001 Compiled in 1 vol.
Template:Nihongo 2002 Serialized in Zipper Comic
Compiled in 1 vol., translated into English by Tokyopop
Template:Nihongo 2002–03 Compiled in 1 vol.
Template:Nihongo 2003–09 Serialized in Feel Young
Compiled in 10 vol., translated into English by Tokyopop
Template:Nihongo 2003–04, 2007–09 Serialized in Cookie
Compiled in 4 vol.
Template:Nihongo 2006 Compiled in 1 vol.
Template:Nihongo 2006 Compiled in 1 vol.
Template:Nihongo 2010 Serialized in Feel Young
Compiled in 1 vol.
& 2010–14 Serialized in Feel Young
Compiled in 14 vol.
Template:Nihongo 2014–21 Serialized in Monthly Big Comic Spirits
Compiled in 14 vol.
Template:Nihongo 2014–15 Serialized in Feel Young
Compiled in 1 vol., translated into English by Viz Media
[9]
Template:Nihongo 2016–present Serialized in Feel Young
Compiled in 5 vol. (as of January 2023)
[9]
Template:Nihongo 2022–present Serialized in Big Comic Spirits
Compiled in 4 vol. (as of April 2024)
[9]

References

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