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				 Demand for stories focused on the elderly has grown alongside 
				their audience: 27.7 percent of Japanese are older than 65, up 
				from 21.5 percent just a decade ago. 
 Readership cuts across society, the publishers say, from 
				retirees looking for plots they identify with to younger 
				Japanese watching their nation age, with growing concern about 
				their later years.
 
 "Different social problems and concerns rise up as opposed to 
				when society is centered around young people, and manga that 
				show the reality of an aging society are in demand from both 
				readers and writers," said Kaoru Endo, a sociology professor at 
				Tokyo's Gakushuin University.
 
 Manga, both print and digital, pulled in 430 billion yen ($3.81 
				billion) in 2017, according to the Research Institute for 
				Publications. They're ubiquitous in daily life, showing up 
				everywhere from crowded subways to coffee shops and waiting 
				rooms.
 
				
				 
				
 Although no public data exists on the market share for 
				senior-focused manga, the genre is clearly growing. Eight of the 
				11 most popular such works, according to industry insiders, 
				started publication after 2014. Three were in 2017 and 2018.
 
 "The over-60 generation - in whose youth manga gained wide 
				acceptance - have loved manga since they were kids," Endo said.
 
 Yuki Ozawa, illustrator of "Sanju Mariko," about an 80-year-old 
				widow who sneaks out of her crowded family home to live on her 
				own and write, thinks escapism plays a big role too.
 
 "When you watch news about aging, there are so many dark, 
				serious topics. It makes people anxious," she told Reuters.
 
 "There are also a lot of people who are single, who probably 
				will never marry and always live alone, and when they're feeling 
				gloomy they read Mariko and feel as if they've seen a ray of 
				light," she said.
 
 Virtually no topic has escaped manga since the medium took off 
				about 50 years ago. There have even been manga on the 2011 
				earthquake and tsunami, including the Fukushima meltdown.
 
 Elderly characters, though, were mostly peripheral: a loving 
				grandma, somebody needing nursing care, a venerable sage.
 
 Manga that did star the elderly, like an early '90s series about 
				an aged heavy metal band, didn't always treat them as normal 
				people.
 
 "Seniors were there, but with an element of surprise. He might 
				be an old man but he's really smart, a weird superhero," said 
				Natsuki Nagata, an assistant sociology professor at Hyogo 
				University of Teacher Education in the western city of Kobe. "It 
				was if they were a different species."
 
				 
				
 But recent examples, such as Kaori Tsurutani's "Metamorphoze no 
				Engawa" (Veranda Metamorphosis), bring a more human touch.
 
 In that story, a septuagenarian widow and geeky teenage girl 
				bond over homoerotic manga, building a friendship of text 
				messages, cafe trips and manga fan events. Ozawa's Mariko may be 
				80, but the loneliness that prompts her to leave home is 
				universal.
 
 Characters are "being illustrated in a way that feels closer to 
				reality," said Tsurutani, 36, who said memories of her late 
				grandmother inform her work.
 
 CHALLENGING SUBJECT
 
 Some manga in the genre use pure fantasy to attract readers 
				while still touching on the often grim reality of elderly 
				issues.
 
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			One series features a septuagenarian couple becoming parents, while 
			in another an elderly woman and a teenage girl switch bodies. 
			"There are certainly a lot of social problems involving the elderly, 
			and they're very serious," said Ozawa, whose Mariko has no health 
			issues and a steady income - uncommon even in a nation with vigorous 
			seniors. "But to write just about that means readers will only pay 
			attention to the social issues, and it'll be a bit depressing."
 Illustrator Kenshi Hirokane, whose "Kosaku Shima" series about a 
			businessman has run since 1983, shows its hero rise from section 
			chief to chairman of his electronics firm, aging realistically over 
			the years.
 
 Hirokane in 1995 also launched "Like Shooting Stars in the 
			Twilight," one of the earliest senior-centered manga. A drama of 
			older peoples' lives and loves, it also includes some hot sex 
			scenes.
 
 "I wanted to write about ordinary men and women having an ordinary 
			love," the 71-year-old Hirokane said of the series. "Readers want 
			topics that are close to them."
 
 Hirokane's prize-winning series now has 58 volumes.
 
			"As many people age, they lose their dreams and hopes, they think 
			there's nothing more they can do. No, it's not like that at all - 
			you can still fall in love, you can still do lots of things," he 
			told Reuters in his western Tokyo studio.
 IN DEMAND
 
 Rikiya Kurimata, a bookseller at Tsutaya, one of Japan's largest 
			bookstore chains, said the genre's readers span generations and 
			genders. Recently, they have been asking for "manga about the 
			elderly" as well as specific titles.
 
			
			 
			
 "I think this trend won't just continue but grow. Supply still 
			hasn't met demand," Kurimata said. "Right now we don't have a 
			special section for the genre, but if things go on like this, we'll 
			have to make one."
 
 A half-million copies of Sanju Mariko, both print and digital, have 
			been sold since its debut in 2016. Tsurutani's first volume has gone 
			through five additional printings since May.
 
			Atsuko Ito, 66, a farmer from northern Japan, says she enjoyed 
			Hirokane's series for the way it highlighted the ups-and-downs of 
			life.
 "It feels as if life itself is drawn there, with things that we all 
			have experienced - and some we haven't - which makes me empathize," 
			she added. "Then sometimes when a main character makes a decision I 
			think, 'I can do that too', and it gives me courage for my daily 
			life."
 
 That sense of humanity is at the heart of the genre's success, Endo 
			said.
 
 "What the manga say is, people are the same underneath - and this 
			teaches young people not to be afraid of either the aged or aging," 
			she said. "We all have the same feelings, young or old."
 
 ($1 = 112.7800 yen)
 
 (Additional reporting by Ami Miyazaki and Mayuko Ono; writing by 
			Elaine Lies; Editing by Gerry Doyle)
 
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