Tsunomaru
- View a machine-translated version of the Japanese article.
- Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
- Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
- You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is
Content in this edit is translated from the existing Japanese Wikipedia article at [[:ja:つの丸]]; see its history for attribution.
- You may also add the template
{{Translated|ja|つの丸}}
to the talk page. - For more guidance, see Wikipedia:Translation.
Tsunomaru (つの丸, born 27 May 1970 in Chiba, Japan) is a Japanese manga artist who writes mostly shōnen manga. He debuted in 1991 with "Go Go Pocho Mukin" (GOGOポチョムキン), which received the Shōnen Weekly Jump newcomer's award. Tsunomaru is best known for the horse-racing comedy Midori no Makibaō, which was adapted as a 61-episode anime television series and received the 1997 Shogakukan Manga Award for children's manga.[1]
Style
Tsunomaru is known for his distinct drawing style. Most of his characters have monkey-like features, most notable in his manga Mon Mon Mon!, including short stature, small eyes, large nostrils, big lips, and if male, exposed genitals.
Works
- Mon mon mon (モンモンモン), Weekly Shōnen Jump (1992 - 1993, 8 volumes)
- Midori no Makibaō (みどりのマキバオー), Weekly Shōnen Jump (1994 - 1998, 16 volumes)
- Survibee (サバイビー sabaibi-), Weekly Shōnen Jump (1999, 3 volumes)
- Jūshin Igari Tora Jirō (重臣猪狩虎次郎), Weekly Shōnen Jump (2001, 2 volumes)
- Gocchan desu!! (ごっちゃんです!!), Weekly Shōnen Jump (2003 - 2004, 5 volumes)
- Taiyō no Makibaō (たいようのマキバオー), Weekly Playboy (2007 - 2011, 16 volumes)
- Taiyō no Makibaō W (たいようのマキバオーW), Weekly Playboy (2011 - 2016, 20 volumes)
References
- ^ 小学館漫画賞:歴代受賞者 (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Archived from the original on 24 April 2005. Retrieved 19 August 2007.
External links
- Profile at The Ultimate Manga Guide
- Fansite[permanent dead link] (in Japanese)
- Midori no Makibaō Official Website (in Japanese)
- v
- t
- e
- Doraemon by Fujiko Fujio (1981)
- Game Center Arashi and Kon'nichiwa! Mi-com by Mitsuru Sugaya (1982)
- Panku Ponk by Haruko Tachiiri (1983)
- Kinnikuman by Yudetamago (1984)
- Asari-chan by Mayumi Muroyama (1985)
- Ganbare, Kickers! by Noriaki Nagai (1986)
- Tsurupika Hagemaru by Shinbo Nomura (1987)
- Obocchama-kun by Yoshinori Kobayashi (1988)
- Mari-chan by Kimiko Uehara (1989)
- Amaizo! Dango by Moo. Nenbei (1990)
- Dojji Donbei by Tetsuhiro Koshita (1991)
- No award given (1992)
- One More Jump by Michiyo Akaishi (1993)
- Ore wa Otoko Da! Kunio-kun by Kōsaku Anakubo (1994)
- Kocchi Muite! Miiko by Eriko Ono (1995)
- Midori no Makibaō by Tsunomaru (1996)
- Ninpen Manmaru by Mikio Igarashi (1997)
- No award given (1998)
- Taro the Space Alien by Yasunari Nadotoshi (1999)
- Seikimatsu Leader den Takeshi! by Mitsutoshi Shimabukuro (2000)
- Pukupuku Natural Circular Notice by Sayuri Tatsuyama (2001)
- Croket! by Manavu Kashimoto (2002)
- Mirmo! by Hiromu Shinozuka (2003)
- Sgt. Frog by Mine Yoshizaki and
- Grandpa Danger by Kazutoshi Soyama (2004)
- Animal Yokochō by Ryō Maekawa (2005)
- Kirarin Revolution by An Nakahara (2006)
- Keshikasu-kun by Noriyuki Murase (2007)
- Naisho no Tsubomi by Yū Yabūchi (2008)
- A Penguin's Troubles by Yūji Nagai (2009)
- Yumeiro Patissiere by Natsumi Matsumoto (2010)
- Inazuma Eleven by Tenya Yabuno (2011)
- Mysterious Joker by Hideyasu Takahashi (2012)
- Zekkyō Gakkyū by Emi Ishikawa (2013)
- Yo-kai Watch by Noriyuki Konishi (2014)
- Usotsuki! Gokuō-kun by Makoto Yoshimoto (2015)
- Ijime by Kaoru Igarashi (2016)
- PriPri Chi-chan!! by Hiromu Shinozuka (2017)
- Age 12 by Nao Maita (2018)
- My New Life as a Cat by Konomi Wagata (2019)
- Duel Masters by Shigenobu Matsumoto and The Magic of Chocolate by Rino Mizuho (2020)
- No award given (2021)
- Ui × Kon by Minori Kurosaki (2022)
- Categories (until 2022):
- General
- Shōnen
- Shōjo
- Children
- 2023–
This biographical article about a manga artist is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e