Witchcraft Works 3

Paperback
$12.95 US
5.03"W x 7"H x 0.6"D   | 6 oz | 24 per carton
On sale Feb 17, 2015 | 190 Pages | 978-1-941220-17-7
| Rated T
Familiar Adversaries

Before meeting Ayaka Kagari, Honoka Takamiya's concerns were ordinary at best. Now, he is at the core of an epic battle between witches. But what may be more troubling to the young man is suddenly realizing that almost every facet of his life revolves around magic users. From school to his home life, witches are bringing fire into his life, and those flames are only spreading.
Very little is publicly known about Ryu Mizunagi but the author's birthday is March 23rd. Originally from Aichi, Mizunagi won the Kodansha Four Seasons Manga Award in 2004 with the pilot for Witchcraft Works. Mizunagi was able to continue the project through Kodansha Japan in 2006.
“With a title like this, where catgirls are throwing around evil bunnies and our heroine decided to
get intel by tying everyone to a stake and torturing them, a sense of humor is essential to not have it tip over into self-parody, and this strikes just the right note.” —A Case Suitable For Treatment

About

Familiar Adversaries

Before meeting Ayaka Kagari, Honoka Takamiya's concerns were ordinary at best. Now, he is at the core of an epic battle between witches. But what may be more troubling to the young man is suddenly realizing that almost every facet of his life revolves around magic users. From school to his home life, witches are bringing fire into his life, and those flames are only spreading.

Creators

Very little is publicly known about Ryu Mizunagi but the author's birthday is March 23rd. Originally from Aichi, Mizunagi won the Kodansha Four Seasons Manga Award in 2004 with the pilot for Witchcraft Works. Mizunagi was able to continue the project through Kodansha Japan in 2006.

Praise

“With a title like this, where catgirls are throwing around evil bunnies and our heroine decided to
get intel by tying everyone to a stake and torturing them, a sense of humor is essential to not have it tip over into self-parody, and this strikes just the right note.” —A Case Suitable For Treatment