himitsu no koi vostfr vf tensei shitara dai nana ouji dattanode kimamani majutsu o kiwamemasu
6 million by April 2021. [21][65][69] By December 2022, the manga had sold over 4 million copies. [70] Volume two of the series sold 16,328 copies during its first week of release. [71] Volume four sold 20,139 its first week,[72] while volume five sold 45,912 copies. [73] The thirteenth and final volume of the series sold 39,759 copies in its first week. [74] Critical reception[edit] Publishers Weekly wrote that the mysterious first volume and Kaku's detailed illustrations, which they found to be reminiscent of Junji Ito's horror manga and give the series an unsettling, gruesome charm, start the series off with promise. [3] Reviewing the first chapter for The Fandom Post, Chris Beveridge gave it a B grade for its artwork, interesting ideas and covering a lot of ground in its setup so it can move forward. The end reveal reminded him of the novel Annihilation. However, he felt the structure was a little awkward and expressed concern that it would fall into the "usual manga storytelling traps. "[75] In a review of the second collected volume, Beveridge's colleague Richard Gutierrez said that while the nightmarishly beautiful images and action might be what initially draws in readers, it is the "underlying complex character construction within this sadistic story which forces us to stay. "[76] Leroy Douresseaux called Hell's Paradise: Jigokuraku volume 1 as one of the best first volumes of a manga tankōbon/graphic novel that he has ever read in a 9/10 review for Comic Book Bin.Agency for Cultural Affairs. Retrieved April 2, 2021. ^ 11人いる!―SFロマン傑作選 (小学館文庫 712) (in Japanese). Shogakukan. ASIN 4091907121. ^ 11人いる! 1. Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Retrieved April 2, 2021. ^ a b 11人いる! : 萩尾望都スペースワンダー (プチフラワーコミックススペシャル). NDL Online (in Japanese).
[SMALL-TEXT]]