This newsletter will bring together articles about animation, anime, S.B. 20 in Texas, issues around Pixar’s new film, and positive developments to contrast the awfulness that’s going o…
The novel this film is based on is officially described as:
"Mifuyu is a #highschool student living with a large collection of books left by her great-grandfather―the vast #library known as Mikura Hall. Although her father is the current caretaker, Mifuyu herself doesn't share her family's passion for literature..." (88/?)
A press release from Korean Film News did talk (http://screening.koreanfilm.or.kr/eng/news/news.jsp?blbdComCd=601006&seq=6321&mode=VIEW) about the library, saying:
"Making friends means entering new worlds. Each of Hoyeon’s letters is hidden in a different school location, guiding Sori to new people and encounters. The first letter’s clue, “819.93 학99,” leads her to the #library, where she finds the second letter. Its contents are curious: written almost like a dictionary entry..." (101/?)
This year marks a monumental moment for Korean feature animation. ‘The Legend of the Exorcist’ (released February 21) drew more than 500,000 viewers, achieving a meaningful score. Han Ji-won’s ‘What This Star Needs’ (released May 30) was the first Korean feature animation to be produced and invested in by Netflix, earning industry recognition. And now comes director Kim Yong-hwan’s ‘Your Letter’ (released October 1).
In that newsletter I also mentioned this blog, at the beginning, writing as follows:
"...I posted about Asahina the part-time library worker, a private library, and maintaining quiet in the manga series The Blue Library."
https://popculturelibraries.wordpress.com/2025/10/05/asahina-the-part-time-library-worker-a-private-library-and-quiet-in-the-blue-library/ (108/?) #manga #libraries #librarians #fiction
In an effort to find more stories with librarians and libraries, I came across The Blue Library, also known as Aoiro Toshokan, on a less-than-legal site. This begins with Asahina being told to be m…
Happy National Coming Out Day! The slogan “be gay, do crime” is from the communal grab-bag of “anti-assimilationist queer slogans…pulled from the chaotic ether, originated n…
The latter links to another article, on the Anime Trends website, saying the following:
"Japanese singer-songwriter Wanuka has released an anime music video for the song “Saishinwa” (“Latest Episode”), the ending theme for the A Star Brighter Than the Sun TV anime adaptation."
https://anitrendz.net/news/2025/10/08/library-romance-blooms-in-saishinwa-anime-music-video/
(142/?)