The Promised Neverland Manga Gets 1-Week Break
Photo Credit: Shueisha

Shueisha’s Weekly Shonen Jump magazine’s 52nd issue uncovered that Kaiu Shirai and Posuka Demizu’s The Promised Neverland manga will take a one-week break in the next upcoming week. The manga will return in the second 2020 issue of the magazine, which ships on December 9.

Shirai and Demizu launched “The Promised Neverland” manga in Shueisha’s Weekly Shonen Jump magazine in August 2016, and the arrangement has entered its last arc segment as of September 2018.

The Promised Neverland is a Japanese manga arrangement composed by Kaiu Shirai and delineated by Posuka Demizu. It has been serialized in Weekly Shōnen Jump since August 1, 2016, with the individual chapters gathered and distributed by Shueisha into sixteen tankōbon volumes as of October 2019.

The story of The Promised Neverland pursues a gathering of stranded youngsters in their break plan from a ranch. Viz Media authorized the manga in North America and serialized The Promised Neverland in their advanced Weekly Shonen Jump magazine.

Manga’s official description is:

Set in the year 2045, Emma is an 11-year-old orphan living in Grace Field House, a self-contained orphanage housing her and 37 other orphans. Life has never been better: with gourmet food; plush beds; clean clothes; games; and the love of their “Mother”, the caretaker, Isabella. The bright and cheerful Emma always aces the regular exams with her two best friends Ray and Norman. The orphans are allowed complete freedom, except to venture beyond the grounds or the gate, which connects the house to the outside world.

The manga was designated for the tenth Manga Taishō grants in January 2017, getting 43 from the Manga Taisho grants’ “Executive Committee.” The manga was additionally assigned for the eleventh version of the Manga Taishō grants in 2018, accepting 26 points altogether. As of August 2017, the manga had 1.5 million in print. By October 2017, the number had expanded to 2.1 million. As of January 2019, the initial 12 volumes had 8.8 million duplicates in print around the world.