Monthly Shōnen Sunday
Encyclopedia
, alternately known as , is a monthly shōnen manga magazine published in Japan
Japan
Japan is an island nation in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean, it lies to the east of the Sea of Japan, China, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, stretching from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea and Taiwan in the south...

 by Shogakukan
Shogakukan
is a Japanese publisher of dictionaries, literature, manga, non-fiction, DVDs, and other media in Japan.Shogakukan founded Shueisha which founded Hakusensha. These are three separate companies, but are together called the Hitotsubashi Group, one of the largest publishing groups in Japan...

 since 12 May 2009 (the June 2009 issue). The magazine was announced in February 2009. Hayashi Masato, editor of Weekly Shōnen Sunday, is the current editor of the monthly magazine as well.

The manga magazine has a target demographic of late teens to early twenties, similar to that of Jump Square
Jump Square
is a Japanese monthly shōnen manga magazine with a circulation of over 300,000. Published by Shueisha, the magazine premiered on November 2, 2007 as a replacement for Monthly Shōnen Jump, another manga anthology that Shueisha discontinued in June of that year. The magazine is a part of the Jump...

.

Manga artists who debuted new series or stories in the magazine include Yellow Tanabe
Yellow Tanabe
is a Japanese manga artist. She was an assistant for Mitsuru Adachi and Makoto Raiku and made her debut in 2002 with the short story Lost Princess. She is best known for the manga series Kekkaishi, which has been adapted as an anime television series and translated into many languages...

, Mitsuru Adachi
Mitsuru Adachi
is a Japanese manga artist. After graduating from Gunma Prefectural Maebashi Commercial High School in 1969, Adachi worked as an assistant for Isami Ishii. He made his manga debut in 1970 with Kieta Bakuon, based on a manga originally created by Satoru Ozawa...

, and Kiyohiko Azuma
Kiyohiko Azuma
is a Japanese manga author and artist. In his manga he writes under the hiragana form of his name, which has led some non-Japanese-speakers to confuse him for a woman . He used to use the pen name ' in his H manga...

.

Manga

Title Artist Creator First issue Last issue Notes
Aoi Honō Kazuhiko Shimamoto
Kazuhiko Shimamoto
is a Japanese manga artist. He attended college at the Osaka University of Arts in the fine arts department. While in college in 1982, he debuted in the February special issue of Shōnen Sunday with Hissatsu no Denkousei. At this point he dropped out of college and devoted his energies to becoming a...

 
} || style="text-align:center" | || ← transferred from
Weekly Young Sunday
Weekly Young Sunday
was a weekly manga magazine published by Shogakukan in Japan since the first issue on April 10, 1987. It replaced Shōnen Big Comic in Shogakukan's lineup of shōnen titles, and many of the titles in Shōnen Big Comic were continued in Young Sunday...


|-
| Asagiro || Minoru Hiramatsu || style="text-align:center" | — || || style="text-align:center" | ||
|-
| Azumanga Daioh: Supplementary Lessons
Azumanga Daioh
is a Japanese comedy manga by Kiyohiko Azuma. It was serialized by MediaWorks in the shōnen manga magazine Dengeki Daioh from 1999 to 2002 and collected in four bound volumes...

|| Kiyohiko Azuma
Kiyohiko Azuma
is a Japanese manga author and artist. In his manga he writes under the hiragana form of his name, which has led some non-Japanese-speakers to confuse him for a woman . He used to use the pen name ' in his H manga...

 || style="text-align:center" | — || || style="text-align:center" | || short serialization
|-
| The!! Beach Stars || Masahiro Morio || style="text-align:center" | — || || style="text-align:center" | || ← transferred from
Weekly Young Sunday
Weekly Young Sunday
was a weekly manga magazine published by Shogakukan in Japan since the first issue on April 10, 1987. It replaced Shōnen Big Comic in Shogakukan's lineup of shōnen titles, and many of the titles in Shōnen Big Comic were continued in Young Sunday...


|-
| Birthday || Yellow Tanabe
Yellow Tanabe
is a Japanese manga artist. She was an assistant for Mitsuru Adachi and Makoto Raiku and made her debut in 2002 with the short story Lost Princess. She is best known for the manga series Kekkaishi, which has been adapted as an anime television series and translated into many languages...

 || style="text-align:center" | — || || style="text-align:center" | || one shot
|-
| Daisan Sekai no Nagai || Ken Nagai || style="text-align:center" | — || || style="text-align:center" | ||
|-
| Hallelujah Overdrive! || Kōtarō Takata || style="text-align:center" | — || || style="text-align:center" | ||
|-
| Itsuka Omae to Jiruba o || Yūji Yokoyama || style="text-align:center" | — || || style="text-align:center" | ||
|-
| Kakushin'ō: Vero Musica || Masanori Yoshida || style="text-align:center" | — || || style="text-align:center" | ||
|-
| Kenryoku no Inu Police Wan! || Pero Sugimoto || style="text-align:center" | — || || style="text-align:center" | ||
|-
| Koko ga Uwasa no El Palacio || Takao Aoyagi || style="text-align:center" | — || || style="text-align:center" | ||
|-
| Kōkō Kyūji Zawa-san || Eriko Mishima || style="text-align:center" | — || || style="text-align:center" | || special
|-
| Let's Play with Yvonne || Tomoyuki Arai || style="text-align:center" | — || || style="text-align:center" | ||
|-
| Lindbergh || Ahn Dongshik || style="text-align:center" | — || || style="text-align:center" | ||
|-
| Makoto no Ōja || Ashibi Fukui || style="text-align:center" | — || || style="text-align:center" | ||
|-
| Manekoi || Taishi Mori || style="text-align:center" | — || || style="text-align:center" | ||
|-
| Nobunaga Concerto || Ayumi Ishii || style="text-align:center" | — || || style="text-align:center" | ||
|-
| Number One Kaidoh || Amiya Harumi || style="text-align:center" | — || || style="text-align:center" | ||
|-
| Otome Genocide || Moricha || style="text-align:center" | — || || style="text-align:center" | || winner of the first Get The Sun Rookie Award
|-
| Q and A || Mitsuru Adachi
Mitsuru Adachi
is a Japanese manga artist. After graduating from Gunma Prefectural Maebashi Commercial High School in 1969, Adachi worked as an assistant for Isami Ishii. He made his manga debut in 1970 with Kieta Bakuon, based on a manga originally created by Satoru Ozawa...

 || style="text-align:center" | — || || style="text-align:center" | ||
|-
| Shinobi no Kuni || Mutsumi Banno || Ryō Wada || || style="text-align:center" | ||
|-
| Toaru Hikūshi e no Tsuioku || Koroku Inumura
Haruyuki Morisawa (illustration) || style="text-align:center" | Maiko Ogawa || || style="text-align:center" | ||
|-
| Tsuki no Hebi: Suikoden Ibun || Hiroo Nakamichi || style="text-align:center" | — || || style="text-align:center" | ||
|-
| Yoshitō-sama || Haruka Shii || style="text-align:center" | — || || style="text-align:center" | ||

|}

Light novels

Title Author Illustrator First issue Last issue Notes
Kai, Sasu. Hirokatsu Sahara  Junji Itō
Junji Ito
is a Japanese horror manga artist best known for his series of short stories about Tomie, an immortal girl who drives her stricken admirers to madness, and Uzumaki, a three-volume series about a town obsessed with spirals.-Biography:...

 
} || style="text-align:center" | ||
|-
| Time Mail || Tōichirō Kujira || style="text-align:center" | Hiroto Ōishi || || style="text-align:center" | ||
|}
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