Instead, he hangs on to them, and if you’re imagining a half-dozen back issues in a basket in his bathroom, think again.
“With 30 years of Jump at home, even if something unpleasant happens during the day, I can think ‘When I get home, I can still read some Dragon Ball.’
A loyal reader of publisher Shueisha’s Weekly Shonen Jump, the most popular manga anthology in Japan, @pekindaq doesn’t dump his copies once he’s done reading them.
Walk around any Japanese neighborhood on the morning of trash pick-up day, and you’ll see stacks of weekly manga anthologies sitting on the curb.