Archives for November 2009

Review: Yokaiden, vol. 2

9780345503299Yokaiden, vol. 2
By Nina Matsumoto
Rated T, ages 13+
Del Rey, $10.99

The second volume of Nina Matsumoto’s is as imaginative as the first, but it lacks a bit of the sparkle.

Volume 1 introduced Hamachi, a nine-year-old boy who is obsessed with yokai, spirits and monsters of Japanese folklore. When his grandmother, his sole caretaker, is killed by a yokai, Hamachi ventures into the yokai realm to seek revenge.

It’s a pretty classic setup that is enlivened by Matsumoto’s colorful renderings of a huge variety of yokai. However, in the first volume, as she notes in her afterword, she focuses on the more grotesque creatures, while in this one she brings in more human-like yokai, and she also sends Hamachi on a very classic fairy-tale quest. Honestly, I think the yokai in the first volume were more interesting.

Still, she puts some pretty good spins on the traditional tales. In order to find the lizard-like kappa who murdered his grandmother, Hamachi visits the nine-tailed fox spirit, one of the most powerful yokai. Matsumoto imagines her as a massively obese, three-eyed, rather feline fox who is obsessed with human culture: She lives in a mockup of a human home, eats human food, and even has her servants wear human masks. The fox takes a liking to Hamachi and wants to keep him as a pet, but when he insists on staying on mission, she reluctantly agrees to tell him where the kappa is. But first, he must retrieve three treasures that have been stolen from her.

The treasures aren’t stolen, of course; they are simply things the fox wants, and it’s Hamachi who will be doing the stealing. Accompanied by his yokai helpers, a lantern and an umbrella that have come to life after lying around for 100 years, he heads out to perform what should be impossible tasks: stealing a sword from a tengu, a mirror from a slit-mouthed woman, and a necklace from the gods. Each quest brings its own danger, but thanks to his friends’ intervention and a bit of dumb luck, Hamachi manages to get the elusive objects and come out alive. Meanwhile, a human yokai hunter is tracking him, but the hunter is slowed down when the yokai trick him out of his sword and he has to win it back by gambling with them.

Once Hamachi completes his three tasks, the fox yokai reneges on her promise and announces that she is going to keep Hamachi after all. The story ends on a cliff-hanger as the mysterious yokai-hunter bursts in, sword in hand.

Almost all of the interest in this book comes from the varied array of yokai and other creatures that Matsumoto brings to life. She doesn’t just stick with the classical definitions but gives them personalities of their own. Despite their outlandishness, the yokai are convincing as characters, and that makes the story tick. Hamachi usually plays straight man to their quirks, although he does have a sense of humor and a reckless quality all his own. If there is a problem in this book, it is his lack of emotional depth. He was not terribly broken up by the death of his grandmother (who admittedly is portrayed as a mean old woman), and he doesn’t seem to be terribly driven in his quest to avenge her death. It’s more like an excuse for a lark in yokai-land than a burning desire that cannot be quenched. In one chapter, he tells his yokai friends about his parents and how they died, and while the story is charming, it is played a bit too much for laughs. This would have been a good time to show Hamachi’s serious side, but instead he not only shows no sadness, he comes off as a bit dumb when his parents return as ghosts and a villager passes off their unusual appearance as tuberculosis.

I have to admit that I rolled my eyes a bit when the fox spirit announced her three quests—that’s a motif that was done to death by the Middle Ages—but Matsumoto mixes things up a bit and gets Hamachi through each one of them fairly quickly. In fact, the story is quite episodic—one adventure per chapter—which makes it easy to put down and pick up again.

Matsumoto’s art is worth a special mention here, as she does something quite difficult and makes it look easy. Rendering supernatural creatures is tough, because you don’t have real-life models, yet she manages to make an umbrella, a one-legged lizard, and an angel-like tengu all come to life in convincing ways. Not only that, she keeps all the art at the same level. Often Japanese manga artists will put a very cartoony character next to a realistic one, a juxtaposition that I find jarring. Matsumoto’s characters are all consistent—human or yokai, they all look like they belong in the same world. She seamlessly blends disparate parts together, too, giving a woman a convincing bird’s foot, for instance. And she avoids the temptation to make them look too close to classical Japanese representations—they are not overly complicated, nor do they appear to be frozen on the page. Instead they are loosely drawn and very animated, so much so that they look like they could hop off the page.

By the end of this volume, Hamachi is no closer to his goal (in fact, he barely mentions it), but we have been introduced to and entertained by a wide array of yokai, and that is the true charm of this series.

ETA: Almost forgot, I reviewed vol. 1 for Graphic Novel Reporter.

(This review is based on a review copy supplied by the publisher.)

Love, terror, Jaws

lullabies_from_hell_cover_artOliver Ho puts the spotlight on horror masters Kazuo Umezu and Hideshi Hino at Pop Matters.

The Yaoi Review asks readers to recommend yaoi for first-timers, and the comments section is bulging with suggestions.

There’s more reader reaction at Japanator, where Danica Davidson asks the internet what it thinks of manga omnibuses.

David Welsh is irritated that the New York Times completely ignores manga in their gift guide to graphic novels, so he’s going to do his own guide on Thanksgiving—and he invites other fans to do the same, whether they have blogs or not.

Patrick Macias shares more of the gekiga version of Jaws at his blog.

Danielle Leigh has more customized manga recommendations at Comics Should Be Good!

Helen McCarthy reports on the opening of the Tezuka show at the Smithsonian.

Wendy Pini has a new website for The Masque of the Red Death.

Amazon lists writer Jason Yadao as a manga; the question is, what kind of a manga is he?

News from Japan: The manga series known as Sex Pistols in Japan and Love Pistols over here is returning to Magazine Be-Boy.

honeyhunt3Reviews: The Manga Recon team gets in touch with their girly side in the latest edition of On the Shojo Beat. EvilOmar is back in action at About Heroes with another round of brief manga reviews.

Megan M. on vol. 10 of Angel Diary (Manga Bookshelf)
Jennifer Dunbar on vols. 1 and 2 of Apothecarius Argentum (A word is a unit of language)
D.M. Evans on vol 2 of B.Ichi (Manga Jouhou)
Deb Aoki on vol. 1 of Deka Kyoshi (About.com)
Ken Haley on vol. 1 of Jormungand (Manga Recon)
Cynthia on vol. 1 of Kurashina Sensei’s Passion (Boys Next Door)
Lissa Pattillo on Legend of Zelda: Oracle of Seasons (Kuriousity)
Cynthia on Liberty Liberty (Boys Next Door)
Sadie Mattox on vol. 1 of Little Fluffy Gigolo Pelu (Extremely Graphic)
John Thomas on vol. 1 of Moyasimon: Tales of Agriculture (Comics Village)
Lori Henderson on vol. 2 of Rin-ne (Manga Xanadu)
Julie on vol. 3 of Wild Ones (Manga Maniac Cafe)

Astro Boy and some giveaways

free_01Joe McCulloch (Jog to most of his readers) has an interesting essay on Astro-Boy at comiXology. If that whets your appetite, check out Astro Boy Magazine, which is now bringing Astro Boy to your iPhone/iPod Touch. (Second link via Robot 6.)

Congratulations to Matthew J. Brady, who is entering his fourth year of blogging at Warren Peace Sings the Blues. To celebrate, he’s giving away two copies of vol. 1 of Moyasimon; click the link for the details.

Just Bento is giving away a copy of The Manga Cookbook.

Christopher Butcher has more photos and commentary from his latest trip to Japan at Comics212.

Off topic, but possibly of interest to genre fans: I took a look at teen-friendly genre webcomics for this week’s SLJ Teen newsletter.

51FfBk3PIHLReviews

Matthew Rozier on vol. 5 of 20th Century Boys (Comics Village)
Peter Gutierrez on vol. 1 of Akira (Graphic Novel Reporter)
Connie on vol. 3 of Arm of Kannon (Slightly Biased Manga)
Danielle Leigh on Crimson Shell and vol. 1 of Jormungand (Comics Should Be Good!)
Connie on vol. 15 of D.Gray-Man (Slightly Biased Manga)
Brigid Alverson on Domo: The Manga (Graphic Novel Reporter)
Peter Gutierrez on vol. 1 of The Ghost in the Shell (Graphic Novel Reporter)
Erica Friedman on vol. 3 of Girl Friends (Okazu)
Connie on vol. 12 of Golgo 13 (Slightly Biased Manga)
goong_6Connie on vol. 6 of Goong (Slightly Biased Manga)
Michelle Smith on vols. 1 and 2 of Honey Hunt (Soliloquy in Blue)
David Brothers on vol. 1 of Jormungand (4thletter)
Shannon Fay on Love Code (Kuriousity)
Courtney Kraft on vols. 1-3 of The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya (Graphic Novel Reporter)
Danica Davidson on vols. 1-4 of Narration of Love (Graphic Novel Reporter)
Julie on vol. 7 of O-Parts Hunter (Manga Maniac Cafe)
Snow Wildsmith on vol. 1 of Rin-ne (Graphic Novel Reporter)
Kinukitty on Two of Hearts (The Hooded Utilitarian)
Danica Davidson on vol. 1 of Zombie Loan (Graphic Novel Reporter)

Waiting for the omnibus

David Welsh and Ben Huber check out this week’s new releases. Also, today’s edition of David’s shoujo/sunjeong alphabet is sponsored by the letter F.

Lissa Pattillo checks the retail sites and finds a number of possible omnibus editions in the works.

Viz editor Andy Nakatani talks to CBR’s Danica Davidson about Naoki Urasawa’s Pluto.

Yamila Abraham of Yaoi Press has an interesting proposition: She wants to team up with Digital to sell Kindles preloaded with yaoi to overseas customers.

John Thomas discusses Moyasimon on the latest Sci-Guys podcast.

News from Japan: Nihon IT Manga Shimbun now offers IT news in manga form.

Reviews: Park Cooper has short takes on a number of new manga at Manga Life.

Tangognat on vol. 5 of 20th Century Boys (Tangognat)
Justin Colussy-Estes on vol. 1 of Antique Bakery (Comics Village)
Ysabet Reinhardt MacFarlane on Boys Over Flowers: Jewelry Box (Manga Life)
Sam Kusek on vol. 1 of Hero Tales (Manga Recon)
Johanna Draper Carlson on vol. 1 of The Lizard Prince (Comics Worth Reading)
Emily on vol. 1 of The Lizard Prince (Emily’s Random Shoujo Manga Page)
Joy Kim on vol. 2 of Maximum Ride (Manga Life)
Jennifer Dunbar on vols. 1 and 2 of MeruPuri (A word is a unit of language)
Julie on vol. 17 of Nana (Manga Maniac Cafe)
David Brothers on vol. 6 of Pluto (4thletter)
Sandy Bilus on Town of Evening Calm, Country of Cherry Blossoms (I Love Rob Liefeld)
Billy Aguiar on World of Warcraft: Death Knight (Prospero’s Manga)
Barb Lien-Cooper on vol. 2 of Yotsuba&! (Manga Life)

Tezuka, Inoue, and thoughts on the Japanese model

In his latest podcast, Japanamerica author Roland Kelts talks manga with Tyler Brule, editor of the UK magazine Monocle.

Christopher Mautner presents Osamu Tezuka 101 at Robot 6.

At the Icarus blog, Simon Jones comments on a recent report that things aren’t going too swimmingly for the manga industry in Japan:

But it all comes down to fewer companies being able to produce mainstream products, because a growing segment of mainstream audiences are no longer willing to pay for them despite increasing demand. So instead, companies focus on a specific set of consumers who are willing to pay top dollar to own official releases – i.e. otaku (doujinshi already work on the same principle. Fans regularly pay $10+ for 20-page parodies that have low print runs.) I’ve mentioned this before… the less the masses support art directly, the more likely art will revert back to the patron system of old, where a few individuals dictate the direction of art.

Jones also looks at a specific manga on which the creator initially took a loss (which is not unusual) and explains why publishers are necessary for the current model. It’s well worth a click.

At The Eastern Edge, Gottsu-iiyan shows off some drawings from Takehiko Inoue’s sketchbook that were reproduced in a Japanese magazine.

Danielle Leigh has more personalized recommendations in her latest Manga Before Flowers column.

At Same Hat, Ryan posts Deb Aoki’s pic of Shintaro Kago at Comitia (NSFW, if you look closely enough).

Noah Buchan of the Taipei Times has an interesting article about Yoshitaka Amano’s fine art career.

This ShojoYourMojo column at the Tokyopop site has a quick overview of sunjeong manhwa as well as a quick look at a number of different titles. (Via Manga Bookshelf’s Manhwa Monday column.)

Reviews: Johanna Draper Carlson takes a quick look at some recent Del Rey titles at Comics Worth Reading. And the Manga Recon team has a bonus set of Manga Minis for us this week.

Julie on vols. 1 and 2 of Blood+ Adagio (Manga Maniac Cafe)
Johanna Draper Carlson on vol. 1 of Deka Kyoshi (Comics Worth Reading)
Lexie on vols. 1-10 of Emma (Poisoned Rationality)
Lissa Pattillo on vol. 1 of Happy Boys (Kuriousity)
Sesho on vol. 1 of Happy Mania (Sesho’s Anime and Manga Reviews)
Billy Aguiar on vol. 1 of Night Head Genesis (Prospero’s Manga)
Sophie Stevens on vol. 1 of Kimi ni Todoke: From Me To You (Animanga Nation)
Snow Wildsmith on Liberty*Liberty (Fujoshi Librarian)
Scott VonSchilling on vol. 1 of The Lizard Prince (The Anime Almanac)
Connie on vol. 6 of Mixed Vegetables (Slightly Biased Manga)
Oyceter on vols. 1 and 2 of Nightschool (Sakura of DOOM)
Lorena Nava Ruggero on vol. 1 of Ooku: The Inner Chambers (i heart manga)
David Welsh on vols. 1 and 2 of What a Wonderful World (Comics Reporter)
Lori Henderson on the November issue of Yen Plus (Comics Village)
Erica Friedman on vol. 18 of Yuri Hime (part 2) (Okazu)

Monday news roundup

Check out what’s on top of my stack this week in the latest What Are You Reading? column at Robot 6.

The Comics Village team looks over the latest new manga releases.

Lori Henderson ably sums up the week’s manga news at Manga Xanadu, and Erica Friedman posts the latest edition of Yuri Network News at Okazu.

Danielle Leigh has another round of personalized manga recommendations at Comics Should Be Good!

Sam Leith explains manga, Tezuka, and Astro-Boy to newcomers at The Guardian.

Lissa Pattillo spots some possible new licenses on Amazon.

ICv2 has a bit more on Shueisha’s plan to sell manga for mobile phones in Japan and the U.S. The comics will be sold through the Microsoft Store and will run on the Microsoft Mobile OS, which has a relatively small market share in the U.S.

The Houston Chronicle reports on First Storm Manga, a group for aspiring manga artists.

News from Japan: The Mayoi Neko Overun! light novels are being adapted into both an anime and a manga.

Reviews: Kate Dacey has short reviews of recent volumes of Detroit Metal City, Jormungand, and Ooku: The Inner Chambers at The Manga Critic. And the Manga Recon team starts off the week with a round of Manga Minis.

David Cabrera on Afterschool Charisma (Subatomic Brainfreeze)
Julie on Crimson-Shell (Manga Maniac Cafe)
Thomas Zoth on vol. 1 of Deka Kyoshi (Mania.com)
Johanna Draper Carlson on vol. 1 of Four-Eyed Prince (Comics Worth Reading)
Jennifer Dunbar on vols. 3 and 4 of Fushigi Yugi: Genbu Kaiden (A word is a unit of language)
Michelle Smith on vol. 4 of Gestalt (Soliloquy in Blue)
Erica Friedman on vol. 4 of Gunsmith Cats Burst (Okazu)
James Fleenor on vol. 2 of KimiKiss (Anime Sentinel)
Lissa Pattillo on Liberty Liberty! (Kuriousity)
Kris on Love/Knot (Manic About Manga)
Michelle Smith on vol. 1 of Nabari No Ou (Soliloquy in Blue)
Julie on vol. 1 of Night Head Genesis (Manga Maniac Cafe)
Melinda Beasi on vol. 1 of Pandora Hearts (Manga Bookshelf)
Amy Grockl on vol. 1 of Punch (Comics Village)
Deb Aoki on Red Snow (About.com)
Lori Henderson on the December issue of Shonen Jump (Manga Xanadu)
Tangognat on vols. 7 and 8 of Swan (Tangognat)
Melinda Beasi on vol. 1 of Time and Again (Manga Bookshelf)
Connie on vol. 5 of Vagabond (VizBig edition) (Slightly Biased Manga)
Connie on vol. 2 of WaqWaq (Slightly Biased Manga)
James Fleenor on vol. 1 of World of Warcraft: Death Knight (Anime Sentinel)
Julie on vol. 6 of The Yagyu Ninja Scrolls: Revenge of the Hori Clan (Manga Maniac Cafe)
Erica Friedman on vol. 18 of Yuri Hime (Okazu)