Harlem Beat Explained

Harlem Beat
Ja Kanji:ハーレム・ビート
Ja Romaji:Hāremu Biito
Genre:Sports
Type:manga
Publisher:Kodansha
Demographic:Shōnen
Magazine:Weekly Shōnen Magazine
First:1994
Last:2000
Volumes:29

is a Japanese manga series created by . It details the struggles of young Nate Torres to go from a benchwarmer to a street-ball player. The story's scope expands as he makes friends and eventually becomes a member of his high school basketball team. It was compiled into 29 tankōbon volumes.

In North America, it was published by Tokyopop. The manga goes up to 9 volumes under the name Harlem Beat,[1] while what were volumes 12+ in Japan were published under the series title Rebound, with the Rebound volumes renumbered beginning at 1.[2] As of August 31, 2009, the Rebound volumes are out of print.[3] The Japanese Harlem Beat Volumes 10 and 11 were never translated by Mixx/Tokyopop.

Jason Thompson stated that it was the author's "most popular manga".[4] According to Thompson the work "assumes that the reader knows basketball."[4]

Creation and conception

Initially Nishiyama planned for the series to be only about street basketball, but later added a school-based team.[5]

Nishiyama had made multiple submissions to show her editors that she had the aptitude to maintain a manga series in a weekly magazine. She stated that initially Harlem Beat did not sell well and that she attended meetings with her editor on how to rectify this, but that sales improved in a manner she described as a "kamikaze"; she stated that working on the manga became "overwhelming" as merchandising occurred.[6]

English version

Thompson stated it was "the first serious sports manga published in America."[4] Some editing of nudity and self-insert references as well as changes of character names are in the English version.[4] Thompson argued "the Americanization and changed names don't hurt the story that much".[4]

The English publication did not include volumes 10 and 11; a summary of volumes 10 and 11 was included in Volume 12.[4]

Characters

Related products

There is a Playstation game Harlem Beat: You're the One published by Konami in Japan in 1999. There are also some novels.[4]

Reception

According to Nishiyama, there were members of the public who believed Harlem Beat was "a bit too "earnest" for its own good".[6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. "Harlem Beat Volume 1." (Archive) Tokyopop. Retrieved on September 11, 2009.
  2. https://web.archive.org/web/20090822155337/http://www.tokyopop.com/product/1116/Rebound/1 Rebound Volume 1
  3. "TOKYOPOP Inc. Out of Print Titles." Tokyopop. 2 ." Retrieved on September 10, 2009.
  4. Web site: Thompson, Jason. Jason Thompson (writer). Jason Thompson's House of 1000 Manga - Harlem Beat. Anime News Network. 2012-02-02. 2020-04-14.
  5. Book: Nishiyama, Yuriko. Goodbye Seniors! Goodbye Johnan Basketball Club!. Rebound!. 18. Tokyopop. Los Angeles. 9781595326232. 126.
  6. Book: Nishiyama, Yuriko. Sayonara, Rebound!. Rebound!. 18. Tokyopop. Los Angeles. 9781595326232. 210-211. - The page refers to the series as Rebound without distinguishing the earlier volumes from the later ones.
  7. Book: Nishiyama, Yuriko. Sayonara, Nate!. Rebound!. 18. Tokyopop. Los Angeles. 9781595326232. 168.
  8. Book: Nishiyama, Yuriko. Goodbye Kyle! Goodbye Mizzy!. Rebound!. 18. Tokyopop. Los Angeles. 9781595326232. 146.
  9. Book: Nishiyama, Yuriko. Goodbye Shurman! Goodbye Kim!. Rebound!. 18. Tokyopop. Los Angeles. 9781595326232. 86.
  10. Book: Nishiyama, Yuriko. Goodbye Kobayashi! Goodbye Sawamura!. Rebound!. 18. Tokyopop. Los Angeles. 9781595326232. 66.