Asadora! Manga Announces Its Return After an Eight-Month Hiatus

The post-war era work will resume official publication after nearly a year of inactivity.

Asadora!
Asadora!© 浦沢直樹/小学館
Sebastián MamaniSebastián Mamani
16/03/2026 15:14
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Prolonged breaks in the publishing industry always generate uncertainty among readers. Picking up the thread of a historical plot requires quickly reconnecting with a complex environment. This Monday, it was officially announced that the historical manga written and illustrated by Naoki Urasawa, Asadora!, will resume publication after an eight-month absence. Weekly Big Comic Spirits magazine confirmed the return of the work for its next print edition, scheduled for March 23.

The title will feature a color lead page to mark its reintegration into the Shogakukan editorial catalog. The department in charge assured that the story will publish new material for at least two consecutive issues. This series follows a bi-weekly release schedule instead of the magazine's traditional weekly rhythm. The work entered a technical hiatus in July 2025, leaving followers waiting for a resolution to the current arc.

About the work

Naoki Urasawa began serializing this project in October 2018. The title represented his first original work for this specific magazine after concluding 21st Century Boys in 2007. The publisher released the ninth collected volume of the story in November 2024. The manga holds special commercial weight within the author's bibliography, as it is his first story to receive official digital distribution. The mangaka has maintained an uninterrupted career since 1981, penning globally impactful stories that inspired multiple anime adaptations such as Monster, Pluto, and Yawara!.

Asadora! Synopsis

The narrative documents the life journey of a Japanese woman from the turbulent post-war period to the present day. The protagonist faces an existence marked by extreme scarcity and social tragedies. Despite the constant economic adversities of each decade, she maintains a firm and unwavering attitude to survive. The story functions as a portrait of the massive cultural, technological, and historical changes that transformed Japanese society over the last century.

Do you believe that the bi-weekly publication format benefits the development of mystery in this author's works compared to the pressures of weekly installments?

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