© Kadokawa
A new manga series has gotten distribution through the Comic Beam imprint with Hyakunichi Coffee. Known originally as 百日珈琲, it comes from Gao Yan and is now available through ComicWalker. You can find the series page here, where it looks like it’s a bi-weekly release.
Gao Yan made their debut in 2020 with Kangeki Su ki Ma and have four works to their name.
Originally known as ComicWalker, Kadokomi is the Kadokawa online manga service that began in March 2014. It distributes works from various Kadokawa manga magazines, both physical and digital, as well as its own original series. Some of the series are released under the Dengeki Comics NEXT imprint.
Plot Concept: “Memories take me to the past, dreams to the future”—Xiaoming, a girl with roots in both Japan and Taiwan, leaves her familiar home in Japan and crosses the sea to attend university in Taiwan, her late father’s hometown. However, life in a foreign land is difficult, and even finding a place to live proves challenging, leaving her at a loss before the entrance ceremony. With nowhere to go, she wanders into Baozangyan, a village in Taipei where history quietly breathes. In a back alley stands a café called “Hundred Days Coffee,” where a mysterious urban legend whispers that it “solves the troubles of those who visit.” The café, run by the owner Meng, is not just a place of rest, but a “dream research institute” that traces people’s memories. “Why does my deceased father speak to me through dreams?” — Guided by the memories of the Asagi Madara butterfly, which travels across 2,000 kilometers of ocean, Xiao Ming begins a journey through time and space, exploring the “Palace of Memories (Mind Palace).” A slightly mysterious Taiwanese human fantasy from Gao Yan, the director of “Green Song – Collecting the Winds” and “The Gap.”
Chris Beveridge
http://www.fandompost.com
Chris has been writing about anime, manga, movies and comics for well on twenty years now. He began AnimeOnDVD.com back in 1998 and has covered nearly every anime release that’s come out in the US ever since.
He likes to write a lot, as you can see.


