Rasetsu 3
Posted: October 30, 2009 Filed under: Rasetsu 1 Comment »Chika Shiomi – Viz – 2009 – 7+ volumes
Here’s another very Halloween-appropriate manga, but this one is less overt horror than it is just a supernatural-tinged shoujo story. It’s pretty good though, and it does have a lot of evil spirits, so, you know… Halloween.
Anyway, I’m still really impressed with how much I like this series. I always go into each volume expecting to be completely bored, but then I’m always entertained. There is an ongoing plot in Rasetsu (the fact she has to find a boyfriend before the demon comes for her), but for the most part, it is composed of these one-shot stories about ghostbusting. Each one also manages to build the characters a little more.
Kuryu is my favorite character by far. Not only is he still a little mysterious, he’s also on top when it comes to romantic interests, even with the age difference between he and Rasetsu. I think it helps that he tends to support her without letting her know, and drops subtle hints about his feelings that are normally misunderstood (quite hilariously, in this volume). Yako is in front in the boyfriend contest, since Rasetsu seems to have latched onto him, but he’s got a lot of the usual jerk act going on, so I like him a little less. Maybe he was a nicer guy in Yurara, though.
The hauntings are still pretty creepy, with the horrible ghosts completely engulfing their victims and going completely unnoticed in some cases. Rasetsu’s mom is a victim in this story, and there is another character who is haunted by what appears to be the ghost of his dead girlfriend. They aren’t nearly as scary or malevolent as some of the past stories, but they are a bit more sad this time around. We also get a chapter dedicated to Aoi, a character who has yet to play any sort of role. Maybe he’ll be important later. Maybe he’ll even be Rasetsu’s boyfriend.
We get another crossover character from Yurara, who relates the story of Yako and the ghost from that series for the benefit of those who didn’t read the series. I’m not quite a big enough fan of Rasetsu to go back for Yurara just yet, but I do think I will purchase future volumes of this series.
This was a review copy provided by Viz.
Hino Horror 13: Zipangu Night
Posted: October 30, 2009 Filed under: Hino Horror 1 Comment »Hideshi Hino – Cocoro Books – 2004 – 14 volumes
“Hino Horror” is the name for this series, but they are mostly unrelated volumes of horror stories by Hideshi Hino.
I can only talk about Hideshi Hino in October, but sadly, it’s been a long time since the last new volume of his work came out in English (or Japanese, as far as I can tell, at least on Amazon Japan). I’ve got nothing left to talk about once these last two volumes of Hino Horror are covered here. Maybe I’ll just loop back around and start again with Hell Baby next year.
This is another more contemporary volume of short stories, these are circa 1997. Now, as I’ve mentioned before… these stories aren’t… well, they aren’t good, by most conventional methods of reckoning. You have to know what you’re getting into. They’re cheap thrills for children, and there’s not much to them. They get the job done, though, and if you go into it knowing what to expect, you’ll probably wind up enjoying it.
I liked this volume better than some of the others because of the esoteric themes of the stories. It reminded me a lot of Mantis Woman by Senno Knife, and I suspect Knife probably owes a lot to Hino. We’ve got a little bit of everything here, from rat girls to children who wake up with their head backwards or with gigantic brains… an onibaba-type that appears to be feeding children pieces of other children, and a grim reaper teacher. The stories never really go any farther than the gimmicks they’re based on, but I like that every single one of them takes place “so long ago that nobody remembers the exact details” even though they all seem to take place in the present.
While the art is nothing like Hino at his best, there are still plenty of shocking visuals. The grim reaper teacher chapter in particular has a lot of little kids being decapitated, stabbed through the head, and otherwise maimed and dismembered messily. For maximum shock/vomit value, there’s a story with a woman breastfeeding a baby. Without warning, her nipple pulls off in the baby’s mouth and maggots spill from her rotting breast. That has to be one of the most disgusting things I’ve ever seen in a manga. For kids? Not so much, but it sure does seem like it was written for that audience.
Yeah, this was probably one of the better Hino Horror volumes… but again, there’s not a whole not to these stories.
Lovely Complex 15
Posted: October 29, 2009 Filed under: Lovely Complex 1 Comment »Aya Nakahara – Viz – 2009 – 17 volumes
This series is pretty cute, and I grow to like the characters more and more with every volume I read. It’s not exactly breaking new ground (this volume covered the tropical graduation trip and the pre-graduation planning, complete with the expected complications for each), but it’s still a fun read for anyone who likes shoujo.
My favorite story in the volume was the first, shorter one, about a character named Seiko. Now, Seiko fulfills the shoujo manga requirement of having a character who cross-dresses, except it’s not for the usual shoujo manga reasons. Seiko is a transsexual that the story takes very seriously, in its way, and Seiko’s story here is about confessing to a boy she ran into on the train. She gives up her female identity and begins unhappily trying to fit in as a boy when her voice gets deeper and she thinks she can’t convincingly be a girl anymore. It’s a nice story, with Seiko completely rejecting her feminine side and Risa continuously trying to convince her otherwise, since Seiko is such a happy, upbeat person and is clearly unhappy as a boy. Since Seiko isn’t even a regular character, and this is a romantic comedy, Seiko’s voice was only deeper because she had a cold, and she winds up with the boy she likes from the train. Hmm. I would read a series about Seiko in a second.
The “Graduation Trip” story takes place in Hawaii (I believe), and is less a graduation trip and more of Mighty and Julia’s wedding, though the wedding is secondary to the usual “Oh! Each couple has their own room and I don’t want to share a bed!”-type wacky hijinx. Risa and Otani power through it, some issues with the wedding are worked out, everyone is okay in the end. Whew. It had me worried for a second.
Later, Risa and Otani are chosen for the graduation committee, but before they do anything, Otani has to help the second-years on the basketball team work through some self-esteem issues.
As mundane as most of the content in this volume was, it definitely helps that Risa and Otani are both likable characters, and everything is handled with a light and humorous touch. I also like that there isn’t a lot that’s over-the-top or too comedic, and I also like the back-and-forth between Risa and Otani, though that seems to be less and less in each volume.
I’m curious to see how things wrap up, though with two volumes left and graduation looming inevitably on the horizon, I have a feeling the story probably just ends rather than having any big climax. And that’s all right by me.
This was a review copy provided by Viz.
Skip Beat 19
Posted: October 29, 2009 Filed under: Skip Beat 4 Comments »Yoshiki Nakamura – Viz – 2009 – 23+ volumes
Oh, Skip Beat. It’s been far too long since the last volume. I’m still completely addicted, so it’s just sad that the bimonthly volumes had to stop as we approach the current Japanese volume.
As much as I am still completely in love with this series, I was a little disappointed in this volume. I was expecting a bit more to be revealed about Ren’s past and family. While we did learn quite a bit, mostly about how he got into acting… all the important stuff is still missng. More important, this was a better time than any for Ren to let his secret slip to Kyoko. I suppose that can still happen, but seeing as how they’ve already discussed Kuon and Koo, it feels like the opportunity has passed. The reasons for keeping his identity as secret as possible are given, but… it just feels wrong to keep it from poor Kyoko.
He makes up for it by trying to gently coerce Kyoko into saying his first name with no honorifics and failing miserably. He’s a scary guy when he’s wound up, so I can’t blame Kyoko for not delivering the super-cute moment that Yashiro imagines.
While there weren’t really any cute Ren moments, we do get to see his mask slip a little. One of my favorite moments was when the viewer only gets to see the back of his head, and while Koo rambles about Kyoko, Lory seems to be staring at Ren and then starts smirking and laughing creepily, prompting Ren to change the subject. I assume that means that Ren was smiling goofily or something. We do, in fact, get to see his goofy smile of gratitude towards the end of the volume when Koo does something incredibly good for Kyoko. Aww.
This storyline wasn’t nearly as good as the last, even considering how eccentric and awesome Koo turned out to be. I think that’s mostly because I was expecting more from it, and that could just be me, but I suppose with this out of the way, things will turn back to Ren and Kyoko. That’ll be just fantastic.
Monster 18
Posted: October 29, 2009 Filed under: Monster 4 Comments »Naoki Urasawa – Viz – 2008 – 18 volumes
Hmm. That didn’t go at all like I imagined. There were also a few things left up in the air that I’m still trying to sort through. I don’t want to talk about it too much here for fear of spoilers, but… hmm. It was just different.
There were confrontations. Most of them weren’t… well, all that satisfying. And then one or both of the parties would be killed or seriously injured.
I liked the climax, and I liked the wind-down after the parts in Ruhenheim quite a bit. The way that they show you how everything was resolved in the eyes of the law is satisfying and not all that time-consuming. That last scene, too. I think he was supposed to have imagined the conversation, but I love that last panel, and I love the way it was left up in the air.
I loved Lunge right up through the end. The story really needed a character like him, and absolutely everything he did, all his investigating, all his doubting, and all his heroics in the end, everything was perfect. He was probably my favorite character in the end. I liked that the mind games may or may not have worked on him through the climax, and I loved the way we were not privy to his thoughts as all the different players in the crime came together at the end in Ruhenheim. One of the best panels in the series, too, was his “I’m sorry.”
I wasn’t clear on a few things in the end, though. Was all of this for Tenma, or was it all for Johan? I’m not entirely sure that point is meant to be clear, because I think the evidence supports both sides. One thing that I’m pretty sure I missed entirely, however, was “Scenery for a Doomsday.” It had to do with a character I had completely forgotten from the first half of the series that was re-introduced at the end, but it was also something that passed between Tenma and Johan. I have no idea.
Also important: Wim is awesome. His role in all of these things at the end was also great, though I’m sad that he and Dieter didn’t wind up together at the end. I have no idea why that would have happened, but it would have been great anyway.
The emphasis on Tenma’s conflict at the end, and the repetition of events from the beginning of the story, however, was a satisfying climax/conclusion, and I have no problem with those parts.
In the end, I can see why Urasawa wanted Monster completed before 20th Century Boys or Pluto were published. It doesn’t hold up very well compared to those, but is great in its own way. I have to wonder about Billy Bat now. Does it completely dwarf 20th Century Boys in terms of storytelling the way that 20thCB dwarfed Monster? I can only imagine.
Monster 17
Posted: October 29, 2009 Filed under: Monster Leave a comment »Naoki Urasawa – Viz – 2008 – 18 volumes
I knew it! I knew once the threads of the story converged, things would get really great really fast. I would have liked to have seen this happen more often, but then again, that isn’t the nature of the story. It’s supposed to have everyone working independently on different versions of the Johan riddle. This ending wouldn’t be spectacular if this wasn’t the first time it happened.
So. After a somewhat disappointing finish to the Anna/Johan confrontation last volume (I’m still not sure how that happened… how could a confrontation between those two be disappointing?), the action moves to a town in Germany called Ruhenheim. At first, it’s just Lunge hanging out for unspecified reasons. Then Grimmer joins him, and the two form an extremely unlikely pair that watches as everyone in the town goes insane. We eventually find out why both are there, and elsewhere, Tenma and Anna separately decide to join the two of them. We can assume Johan is hanging out somewhere, too, since apparently this is leading up to his… suicide?
Everything that happened here was pretty outstanding, and it was great to see the peace in the quiet little mountain town shatter as petty bickering escalated and people grew suspicious. I’m not convinced that the townspeople did everything implied, but we’ll find out next time. I also like that the setting is about to get cut off from the rest of the world by massive flooding. I’m curious as to how Tenma and Anna will get there, but I’m sure they’ll find a way.
If you’ll excuse me, I’m going to read the last volume right now.
Bleach 29
Posted: October 28, 2009 Filed under: Bleach 4 Comments »Tite Kubo – Viz – 2009 – 41+ volumes
As expected, this volume contains mostly fights. It starts with Ichigo’s battle with the Don Kanonji-looking arrancar, and then the bulk of the middle covers Ishida’s fight with the arrancar featured on the cover of the book. There are a few chapters in the end about Chad’s fight, but there’s a bit of plot development surrounding him, so I think that’ll carry over into the next volume.
There’s not that much to report about the fights. Ichigo’s went exactly how you would expect it, Ishida unveils a new type of weapon and an interesting source for his power (I’m curious how this will be stopped/pushed to its limits later), and Chad also reveals the nature of his arms. Sort of. Ichigo’s fight is the least interesting, but I’m thankful that none of these lasted the entire volume, since these arrancars are still small potatoes. Unfortunately, with all three of these characters covered in this volume, that leaves Rukia and Renji, who I still feel rudely interrupted the action last time, and I am less interested in their fights.
One thing that made this volume more fun to read is the continued presence of Nel and her companions. Nel is cute and proves to be somewhat useful during Ichigo’s fight, but the real stars of the show were the other two in her group. One his hilariously running down Renji. Whle I may not be looking forward to his fight, I am looking forward to how he will react to that hollow during his fight. And Ishida winds up with the third from the group, and I was extremely amused with the way the hollow continuously needles the very serious Ishida all during the fight. My favorite joke is where the hollow randomly refers to Ishida by name, and then a few panels later (and for the rest of the story) calls him Ichigo. While he can remember Ishida for whatever reason (possibly because of his attire, I suppose), he seems to have no recollection of Ichigo whatsoever.
Funny stuff, and I’m extremely glad the humor is there to break up the fights.
This was a review copy provided by Viz.
Too Long
Posted: October 28, 2009 Filed under: Too Long 10 Comments »Hee Jung Park – Tokyopop – 2008 – 1 volume
When Tokyopop released all those Hee Jung Park series last year (Martin & John, Fever, Hotel Africa), this volume was sort of the odd man out. In fact, I didn’t even know this had come out, and I was really, really into those other series by the same author. I didn’t find out about this until much later, and by then the other series had been cancelled.
This is a volume of short stories. Normally I’m a little wary of these, because more often than not wind up not liking these types of short story collections (I think reading several short stories in a row makes the flaws in storytelling much more noticeable). This one was quite different. I almost think the stories were all written to go in the volume together. While none of them have anything whatsoever in common, Park is a pretty stylish artist and great at composition and putting together different types of storytelling techniques, so it seems like the stories were written with each other in mind simply because the book fits together so well stylistically.
There are several unusual storytelling techniques used art-wise throughout the book. I liked that frequently, we were thrust into the middle of a story with no preamble, usually during its most emotional moments if the story was particularly short, and part of the fun was trying to reconstruct the circumstances surrounding the rather intense emotion on display. One of my favorite stories, the longer “Eoheulli,” starts us off in the middle of a nightmare, and from there it cuts between a flashback to her childhood and a search she is conducting as an adult. The primary focus of the story is a character she calls “big sister,” and while reading the story, it’s almost maddening the way the pieces slowly fall into place and “big sister’s” situation becomes more and more clear.
The techniques are more apparent in the shorter stories. I tend not to like really short stories since normally there just aren’t enough pages to put together something meaningful, but this technique makes them far more interesting. In particular, the very short “Insomnia” does a great job of presenting us a scene that uses the short form to its advantage as we try and figure out who the sleepless character is talking about towards the middle, and the cause of his insomnia becomes clear by the end.
There are a couple more traditional stories mixed in as well. I liked “Crybaby Angel”, which reads like a chidren’s storybook and is about an angel who cries and isn’t allowed to become a “happy baby.” I also enjoyed “Gwangrim is Awesome,” which is a more traditional shoujo high school romance story, but made far better just by virtue of having been drawn by Park.
If you couldn’t already tell, I am a big fan of Hee Jung Park. Not only do I like her less traditional narrative structure, her art is also quite excellent, including her composition and the way she mixes techniques. Some stories forego panel borders in order to be more stream-of-conscience-type narratives, and the last story in the volume (Crybaby Angel) reads exactly like a picture book, with an illustration with accompanying story text on each page. Even without special fancy techniques, each page is extremely well-composed and I enjoyed looking at her very un-traditional panel layouts.
Her stories also have a lot more emotional impact than the average manga short story. The techniques I talk about earlier help, but rather than going for the same bland subjects again and again, I also like that Park writes about a broad range of subjects and people, everything from the usual teenage fare to divorced adults to grieving young people to… well, little baby angels.
I think the only criticism I can level at the collection is that some of the stories are a bit… well, too stylish. Especially earlier in the volume. The first story, “Blood,” is a good example. This story is also hindered by being in black and white (major themes in the story are the extremely pale, colorless love interest and the heroines interest in the vivid color of blood), but I was also completely uninterested in the heroine’s insistence that the love interest have “more vivid color.” Whatever. Sometimes the storytelling techniques work against the stories a bit, too. The stories tend to open with very melodramatic declarations, and while I like to put the pieces together, sometimes the characters are a little too overwrought and verbose and I lose interest. But these were mostly only a problem with a few of the earlier stories.
Most of the volume is quite excellent, and this is probably among the best female-oriented comic short story collection that I’ve seen. I think a few people will probably be put off by its style and melodrama, but it definitely makes for a very unorthodox and rewarding reading experience. It’s also quite a long volume (just shy of 300 pages), so you also get a ton of content and a bunch of stories to go between if you find some not to your liking. Hee Jung Park comes through once again, and once again, I’m going to lament the fact that none of her stories are coming out in English anymore. She really does seem to be one of the greats, and I would love to read more than a volume or two of her best work.
13th Boy 2
Posted: October 27, 2009 Filed under: 13th Boy Leave a comment »Sang-Eun Lee – Yen Press – 2009 – 7 volumes
I reviewed this for the weekly Manga Minis column, so you can read my thoughts on it over there.
I am one of the biggest fans of these Korean series that Yen Press releases, I think, so it’s no surprise when I wind up liking one. Usually I don’t like them right away like 13th Boy, though. While the plots of all the others (except for the best ones, like One Thousand and One Nights and Goong) fade in my memory between volumes, 13th Boy has been hanging around in the back of my mind since I read the first volume this spring, and I’ve wondered what insane direction the story would take next.
So far, I’m not disappointed in the plot at all. The characters are only okay, but the weird quirks of the story are what keep me reading. It’s good stuff, and I’m sad it’s only a 3-volumes-a-year release.
Sake Jock
Posted: October 27, 2009 Filed under: Sake Jock Leave a comment »various – Fantagraphics – 1995 – 1 issue (72 pages)
artists included: Imiri Sakabashira, Naoto Yamakawa, Kiriko Nananan, Nekojiru, Yasuji Tanioka, Yoshiharu Mitsumoto, Naoki and Shunichi Karasawa.
This is basically a one-shot containing examples of underground comics (I almost wrote outsider art, which is close enough, I suppose). It’s old, sort of a proto-Comics Underground Japan, except the examples are far shorter in this collection (obviously). The two collections both feature Nekojirou, an artist I would love to see a collection from. Stranger things have happened (we were blessed with the Takashi Nemoto volume a year ago, after all), so maybe we’ll see it someday.
Now, my favorite story here was “The Abaolone Cat”, which is credited to Kiriko Nananan in the front, but is probably drawn by Naoki and Shunichi Karasawa. It is a very detailed and scientific explanation about why a cat’s ears will fall off if it eats abalone, and contains a terrifying anecdote about going into a warehouse full of earless cats. It alternates between a crude style and details drawn from photos for things like head x-rays, photos of the earless cats, et cetera. It also meanders in an absolutely delightful way, where it starts off talking about the cats, then moves into CAT scans, then into medical research and anecdotes about sawing off pieces of frozen cadavers, then into stories about people having to carry dead bodies around, then into an anecdote about how annoying cafe chatter can be. It then ends with a realistic picture of a cat without ears. Rather than the anecdotes being inane, they are wonderful stories and the way the short segues between them is quite humorous.
The Kiriko Nananan story is about two women staying together that is sad, romantic, and just a bit too short to have much impact. I do like her art though, which was some of the most decent in the book and made excellent use of composition and foreground-background relationships. She’s the only artist in this collection that actually does have a book published in English, called Blue, and one of her shorts also appears in Secret Comics Japan.
A lot of the other comics were in the heta-uma art style that is “so bad it’s good,” but is mostly crude and relatively unappealing to me. Some of the stories were also crude (“What a Mixed Up World!” in particular), but the sense of humor was more absurd than it was crude.
I take that back, actually, the first story, called “Horse Horse Tiger Tiger,” has amazingly detailed backgrounds and excellent use of dark/light relationship, but an incomprehensible story about a crudely drawn one-eyed cat happening through a surreal dream where fish explode, he gnaws on a goat head, and is not wearing any pants. This story was by Imiri Sakabashira.
The stories are all so short that it doesn’t really make for a satisfying reading experience, but it’s an interesting look at underground comics, all the same. It’s also far less offensive content-wise than the other two available collections, if that’s something that was keeping you from the others. It covers a little bit of everything, from the surreal to the super-crude to the… well, “Abalone Cat,” to the romantic. The stories were well-chosen. For some reason, I thought Yoshiharu Tsuge was in this collection too, so I was a little disappointed. That’s not the book’s fault, though.