Moe-Kei?
May 23rd, 2005 | comics talk
Naisho no Tsubomi (Tsubomi’s Secrets) is the critically acclaimed manga getting the littlest schoolgirls swooning, but is also innocent enough to make their parents and teachers happy, too.
“We’ve got another print run of 20,000 copies for late May. It’s hardly rare for a comic to sell 30,000 copies, but it is almost unheard of for a series of works directed at elementary school children to do so well,” a spokesman for Shogakkan, the publisher of the manga, tells…
Parents and teachers have praised the comic’s realistic depiction of life for children entering puberty. But the book, drawn by veteran manga artist Yu Yabuuchi, is not attracting simply elementary school children and their minders.
“We sold out the 30 copies we ordered on the same day we shipped them in,” says an employee of K-Books in Akihabara, the spiritual home of Japan’s hordes of manga-loving otaku. “Take a look and you’ll see our customers are nearly all men. Just about everybody who bought the book here was a man in his 30s.”
Naisho no Tsubomi, it seems, has hit a nerve with the moe-kei type of otaku, the name given to geeks with a fascination for little girls…




Naisho no Tsubomi is popular with young girls and it’s selling fast:…