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It Came from the Sinosphere: You Are the Apple of My Eye (film)

November 20, 2012 by Sara K. 3 Comments

A bunch of high school boys are looking at the same thing

The Shen Chia-yi fan club

You Are the Apple of My Eye is one of the most popular novels and, more recently, one of the most popular Taiwanese movies of the last ten years. The Mandarin title ‘Nà​ Xiē Nián,​ Wǒ​men Yī​qǐ Zhuī​ de Nǚ​hái’ ​​​​(那些年,我們一起追的女孩) roughly means “Those Years, The Girl We Pursued Together,” and I think that’s a more accurate description of this story.

The Story

The story starts with a senior high school student, Ko Ching-teng, in Changhua. Changhua is to Taiwan as Indiana is to the United States, in other words, a place generally not known to people outside of Taiwan that is noted for … not being very interesting (the tourist town of Lukang nonwithstanding).

Ko Ching-teng head is lying on his desk at home

Ko Ching-teng and all his buddies have a crush on the same girl, Shen Chia-yi. The story is basically about the progression of Ko Ching-teng’s relationship with Shen Chia-yi in senior high school, college, and afterwards.

About Giddens Ko

So, I’ve talked about Giddens before, but considering that this is one the most popular novels he ever wrote *and* he is the director of this movie, I think it’s time to talk more about him.

A bunch of ... monks? ... collapsing in front of a Buddha at night

This is what a Giddens high school romance looks like

Last time, I talked about one of Giddens’ quasi-wuxia stories. Well, in addition to writing quasi-wuxia, he also writes high school romance. That in itself is rather admirable.

Notice the “Ko” in “Giddens Ko.” It’s the same as the “Ko” in “Ko Ching-teng.” “Giddens” of course is a pen name; his name in real life is … Ko Ching-teng. That’s right. Though this is labelled as fiction, the novel is basically a memoir (though I don’t know to what extent it is accurate and to what extent Giddens has changed things for entertainment purposes).

This is not going to be the last time I talk about Giddens, so I think that’s enough for now.

Novel vs. Movie

It’s striking just how different the novel is from the movie. I think this is actually a good thing. I can’t really imagine the novel working well as a movie, and most of the changes do make the story more cinematic.

First of all, the time frame of the movie is shorter than the novel. The novel starts when Ko Ching-teng is 12 years old, the movie … I’m not clear, but at the earliest the movie starts when Ko Ching-teng is 15 years old.

The movie focuses a lot on juvenile humor, and depicts Ko Ching-teng as your everyday class clown. The novel is much more centered on nostalgia, and the force of Ko Ching-teng’s thoroughly geeky personality is much more apparent. For example, the novel drops references to Windows 3.1 and TV shows which were popular in Taiwan in the early 1990s, all absent from the movie.

Somebody is reading the Taiwanese Edition of Dragonball

In the movie, Shen Chia-yi tutors Ko Ching-teng in English (well, not just English, but the movie focuses on the English). In the novel, IIRC, it says that that Chinese and English were the only subjects in school that Ko Ching-teng actually got good grades in because he was destined to become a novelist. Shen Chia-yi had to prod him into studying other subjects.

In fact, there are lots of changes between the novel and the movie. What doesn’t change is the main idea. And that’s the point. Anybody (who can read Chinese) who wants the novel can read the bloody novel. If communicating the main idea—that first love is valuable even if it doesn’t last—is what’s important, then the movie is actually rather faithful.

Look! It’s a Pingxi Sky Lantern!

The three main towns in the Pingxi District—Shifen, Pingxi, and Jingtong—are some of the most touristy towns in Taiwan. They are supposed to represent an idyllic rustic Taiwanese town (if you want to visit the area but without the hordes of tourists, I suggest visiting the little village of Lingjiao, between Shifen and Pingxi, which has some nice stuff, and is much quieter). Of course, my favorite town in the Keelung valley is Houtong, which is finally getting discovered (I don’t know whether to be happy or sad about that).

Ko Ching-teng and Shen Chia-yi walk the train tracks of Jingtong

These are the train tracks right outside Jingtong’s quaint Japanese-era train station. If you’re seen the idol drama Devil Beside You (adapted from the manga The Devil Does Exist), then you might have noticed that the main characters also spend some time in Jingtong.

One of the most famous things about the Pingxi District is their custom of launching sky lanterns, in particular during the Lantern Festival (an island-wide celebration). Many tourists choose to launch their own sky lantern when they visit.

Ko Ching-teng and Shen Chia-yi launch a sky lantern

Now, I have been to the sky lantern festival in Shifen, and to be honest, I think it’s overrated. But my main objection to the sky lanterns is the environmental toll. The Pingxi district is a great place to go hiking—both for people who like easy strolls and people who like strenuous treks on knife-edge ridges—and the woods are filled with fallen lanterns. Made out of plastic. I think they should, at the very least, use some compostable material to make the lanterns, and if that makes it a lot more expensive, so be it. If the tourists don’t want to pay for it, then they can pass.

Of course, when I see this, I think about how kitchy this tradition has become, as well as the woods filled with discarded plastic. But in the context of the movie, it’s actually a nice symbol of the characters’ hopes.

About that Juvenile Humor

Two high school boys masturbate in class.

The boys are having fun in class (notice where their left hands are).

I have a confession to make.

I actually like the humor in this movie. Yes, even though much of it revolves around masturbation and erections and other sexual subjects.

But it works.

It works because it’s authentic. Giddens isn’t using the humor just to score lafs. This is a movie about the transition from adolescence to adulthood, and 1) many adolescents and young adults spend a lot of time masturbating and thinking about sex and b) it’s really awkward, and sometimes humor is the best way to talk about something awkward.

Why I Have Trouble Relating to the Movie

Shen Chia-yi is mad at Ko Ching-teng

I didn’t have a “Shen Chia-yi” in my teenage years. There was nobody who I waxed romantically about even 10% as much Ko Ching-teng does about Shen Chia-yi. If I made a list of the things that I was most preoccupied with during my teenage years, “romance” would not make it to the top ten (likewise, the things that would appear in my top five don’t seem to be so important to Ko Ching-teng, at least not in this story). There is such a disconnect between my experience as a teenager and Ko Ching-teng’s experience as shown in both the novel and the movie, that I get the feeling that this story is not for me.

But that’s okay. Not all stories have to be about me. And the popularity of both the novel and the movie prove that it does resonate with a lot of people.

Availability in English

This movie is available on DVD with English subtitles.

Conclusion

Everybody I have asked says that the novel is better than the movie. I cannot argue with them. The novel gives a much deeper and more thorough description of Ko Ching-teng’s feelings, makes it easier to understand why Ko Ching-teng and Shen Chia-yi are attracted to each other, makes Ko Ching-teng seem more like a unique person, and makes it clearer why Ko Ching-teng and Shen Chia-yi are not actually a good match. I think MJ would like the novel more that the movie too.

Yet I happen to like the movie more than the novel.

I respect the novel. But as I said earlier, it is not easy for me to relate to this … and there is page after page after page about Ko Ching-teng’s feelings.

The movie puts more emphasis on humorous hijinks. It’s more entertaining, and it’s much faster. And the movie still manages to get the main point across. Whee!

Next Time: North City, Book of a Hundred Drawings (manhua)


Sara K. thinks that the popularity of Giddens is evidence that Taiwan is a society of geeks. It’s probably more accurate to say the subset of the population that actually reads novels is extremely geeky, but even so, Giddens’ works have a much higher geek factor than the vast majority of bestsellers in the United States.

Filed Under: It Came From the Sinosphere Tagged With: Giddens, You Are the Apple of My Eye

Young Miss Holmes, Casebook 3-4

November 20, 2012 by Sean Gaffney

By Kaoru Shintani. Released in Japan as “Christie High Tension” by Media Factory, serialized in the magazine Comic Flapper. Released in North America by Seven Seas.

The second omnibus volume of Young Miss Holmes, I will admit, did not thrill me quite as much as the first. Shintani is starting to have more difficulty inserting Christie and company into the Holmes stories, and I suspect, given there’s 3 volumes (one omnibus) to go after this that he might veer off the canonical road soon. He also has that odd habit that most manga writers who started in the 70s and 80s do of inserting humor – usually quite low humor – at the oddest points, something he no doubt got from Tezuka (you can see traces of this in Adachi and Takahashi’s writing as well). That said, this is still a lot of fun, with Christie being incredibly precocious while avoiding cloying qualities, and some much needed backstory for her two maids.

The first half of the book is taken up with The Hound of the Baskervilles, quite possibly the most famous of the Holmes stories. There are no attempts to alter the outcome of the story such as we saw before, and it spins out (with much compression) as expected. As I noted above, we get lots of opportunities to see Christie be brilliant, making deductions and logical leaps. At the same time, though, she has the patience and drive of a 10-year-old girl, and her maids realize this – though they’re still not able to corral her very well. And, as Shintani knows what’s popular and what isn’t, we get some nice opportunities of seeing Nora using her whip, including a battle with the Hound (which doesn’t go well, but luckily she has an unseen rescuer.) And again, thankfully, Holmes arrives at the solution faster than anyone else, including Christie.

The second story adapted here is The Adventure Of The Six Napoleons, which has a solution that is obvious enough that Shintani can easily write Holmes out of the tale and have Christie solving everything. This also reintroduces Detective Dexter of Scotland Yard, who we briefly saw in Hound, and who pops up every now and then from now on. He has an immediate attraction to head maid Ann Marie, something Christie notes and is quick to take advantage of. Again, the case plays out much like the original, but makes for a nicely entertaining adaptation.

A brief short story, The Memories of Nora, follows, and is what it sounds like: an original story by Shintani showing Nora’s life to date and how she became a maid at the Hope Estate. It’s not a pleasant childhood to say the least (and has some annoying ‘evil gypsies’ stereotypes to boot), but lets us see that Nora has no regrets as to where she’s ended up.

The final Holmes story adapted for Christie is The Five Orange Pips. Wisely, Shintani leaves the main mystery to Holmes, if only so that Christie doesn’t have to feel responsible for the fallout. Christie’s plot rests with Ann Marie, who has a complete freakout when she hears about the pips. As with most modern North American readers, the solution is far more obvious these days – we know what KKK stands for – so the storyline concentrates on Ann Marie’s own tragic childhood, and her change from a sweet little child to an instrument of God’s vengeance (as Holmes rather awkwardly puts it).

I must note once again that Seven Seas’ All Ages rating for the book is entirely inappropriate, in my opinion. Leaving aside the brief non-sexual shots of underage nudity, there’s simply a giant pile of violence here, including lingering shots of corpses with their throats slit, as well as a young girl killing an entire mansion full of people. I get that ratings can sometimes drive sales, and that it’s very hard to sell books starring 10-year-old cuties to adults. But come on.

That said, I am very grateful to Seven Seas for bringing out this series, which is a fast-paced and fun mystery series with a cute and sharp as a whip protagonist, and can’t wait (though I will have to, as it’s not out till September 2013) for the conclusion. And note with amusement that even Christie herself has started to call her maids ‘Herculean’.

Filed Under: REVIEWS

Manga Report joins Manga Bookshelf

November 19, 2012 by MJ 4 Comments

Good morning, Manga Bookshelf readers! Today, we’re pleased to announce that Anna Neatrour has officially joined the Battle Robot, bringing her blog Manga Report into the Manga Bookshelf family of blogs.

From her bio: Anna Neatrour is a librarian with too much manga in her house. She started blogging at TangognaT in 2003 about libraries, books, manga, and comics. She created Manga Report to focus only on manga reviews in 2010. Anna is a member of the writing collective known as The Bureau Chiefs, authors of FakeAPStylebook and the book Write More Good.

Anna has been running the roundtable series Bringing the Drama here since February of this year. She joins Sean, Michelle, Brigid, and I in today’s Pick of the Week—her first column as a Manga Bookshelf blogger.

Please join me in welcoming Anna to the fold!

Filed Under: UNSHELVED Tagged With: anna, announcements, site news

Pick of the Week: Thermae Romae FTW

November 19, 2012 by MJ, Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Brigid Alverson and Anna N 2 Comments

SEAN: There’s a ton of stuff coming out next week—again—but one obvious Pick of the Week, which is Mari Yamazaki’s Thermae Romae. The artist is known for her comedies, and there’s lots to laugh about here. A Roman architect discovers the ability to time-travel via bath, and ends up in modern times. Though initially freaked out, he is able to use our own modern bathing ideas to transform his own spa back in his time. It may not sound like much, but the execution is what makes it a winner. The manga has won awards and spawned an anime and a live-action feature. Plus the artist lives in Chicago! If this sells well, maybe we can get Kodansha or Vertical to pick up her Sweet Home Chicago series, which runs in the josei magazine Kiss.

MJ: This really is a pretty incredible week, including the latest volume of Real, another installment of Viz’s X omnibus, and license rescue 07-Ghost. And though I absolutely agree with Sean that Thermae Romae trumps pretty much anything you could put on the list, since he’s already mentioned that, I’ll take the opportunity to give a shout-out to one of my surprise favorites of the year, Yen Press’ graphic novel adaptation of Gail Carriger’s Soulless. Its second volume comes out this week, and it’s a wild, tense ride. If you only buy one comic this week, go for Thermae Romae, but if you can manage two, Soulless is worth a look!

MICHELLE: … That really does just about sum it up, doesn’t it?

If, after buying Thermae Romae and Soulless you have room in your budget for more, then I absolutely recommend volume eleven of Takehiko Inoue’s Real. Saturn Apartments and Bokurano: Ours are good, too!

BRIGID: Yes, I want to jump in and put in the word for vol. 6 of Saturn Apartments. It’s a story with a great concept—the main character is a window-washer for a ring-shaped apartment complex that orbits around the earth, so he sees all strata of society—and an amazing visual sense. The cast of characters has been growing since volume 1, and there is an underlying plot anchoring it all, but it’s really a collection of self-contained stories so it isn’t hard to just jump in and start reading with this volume. So yes, Thermae Romae is my first pick too—it’s awesome—but this is my solid second choice.

ANNA: Thermae Romae is on my wish list for the holidays and any week that features a new volume of manga by Takehiko Inoue is a cause for celebration. I am going to go with 07-Ghost though, simply because it is next on my to-read list. I’m always a bit curious about license rescues, and I didn’t read the earlier version of the series which was published by the late lamented Go!Comi. I thought it was interesting that this manga came from the magazine Monthly Comic Zero Sum, home of Loveless and Saiyuki Reload. As I was quickly flipping through the volume I saw attractive art, plenty of action scenes, and weird religious iconography. I am always excited to read any manga featuring those three things!


Readers, what looks good to you this week?

Filed Under: PICK OF THE WEEK

Bookshelf Briefs 11/19/12

November 19, 2012 by Sean Gaffney, MJ and Michelle Smith 7 Comments

This week, Sean, MJ, & Michelle look at recent releases from VIZ Media and Yen Press.


Blue Exorcist, Vol. 8 | By Kazue Kato | VIZ Media – For the most part this is a typical Jump battle volume, meaning there’s lots of fighting and enemies vanquished, but not as much to really mention in a review. There’s enough to really enjoy, though. Shiemi showing her gumption in commanding her familiar to help her save Izumo; Renzo having to face up to the fact that doing the right thing is really annoying and hard; and all of Rin and Bon’s fight against the Impure King (who is truly disgusting adn foul, as you would expect from a giant demonic fungus). But it’s Yukio who gets the most attention here, as he’s dealing with the traitor Saburota, who knows just how to get under his skin and hit his weaknesses. Just as Rin feels his brother outshines him, Yukio feels the same. Hopefully it won’t prove to be a problem in future, but the foreshadowing isn’t looking good. -Sean Gaffney

Kamisama Kiss, Vol. 11 | By Julietta Suzuki | VIZ Media – Volumes like this remind me why I keep reading Kamisama Kiss even when it seems that the plot is content to coast along without resolving much. There’s just strong characterization, particularly of the heroine, Nanami. We already knew her father was a scumball from the opening chapter, but the flashbacks we get here show a truly tragic childhood, with the love of her mother (who dies early, in what is hinted to be part of a kamisama’s curse) being one of the few bright spots… and these days Nanami can’t even remember her face. It’s a sign of her strong will that she’s grown up to be the determined young woman she is today, and we see that determination in the second half, where she goes toe to toe with some nameless demons. Cute, intelligent, plucky heroines. What’s not to like? -Sean Gaffney

Kimi ni Todoke: From Me to You, Vol. 15 | By Karuho Shiina | VIZ Media – Although the friendship between Sawako, Chizu, and Ayane has been a central focus of the series since the beginning, at this point in the story it seems like the three of them have truly become co-leads, as they each face their own romantic problems in this volume. Sawako is troubled by a new distance in her relationship with Kazehaya; Ayane is possibly beginning to feel something for Kent, though she insists she’s not as great as he thinks she is; and Chizu is panicking because Ryu’s confession of love means the end of the sibling-like relationship they’ve shared since childhood. There’s a long and wonderful flashback to the two of them as kids, proving that she’s always been the one who understood him best, culminating in a surprising display of feeling from Ryu. Honestly, it’s giving me goosebumps just typing about it. How can I possibly wait until April for the next installment?! – Michelle Smith

March Story, Vol. 4 | By Kim Hung-Min and Yan Kyung-Il | VIZ Media – After a very exciting and beautifully-crafted third volume, volume four of March Story focuses on March’s secret gender. On the upside, this plays out much differently than in the all-too-common gender-bending comedy. On the downside, it seems to be part of some kind of grand, coordinated effort to boost the series’ volume of fanservice, which is suddenly in full bloom. The artists pull out all the usual tricks in this volume, including ill-fitting clothing that can’t quite keep from falling off and strategically timed gusts of wind. From this reader’s perspective, it reads as distracting and unnecessary pandering that is below these artists’ abilities, but perhaps it’s just a stern reminder that I’m not the series’ demographic after all. There’s enough genuine substance still in this volume to keep my attention, but I can’t deny that I found it disappointing. – MJ

The Melancholy of Suzumiya Haruhi-chan, Vol. 6 | By Puyo and Nagaru Tanigawa | Yen Press – The goal of this series is to be as silly as possible. And as logn as that goal is in sight, it doesn’t matter how it achieves it. This time around, we get a discussion of fanservice, the continued humiliation of Mori-san, a far larger role for Kunikida than he ever gets in the main series (though he may not be too happy with why that is), and Ryoko and Kimidori-san teaming up to throw Yuki a school festival in the privacy of their own apartment. But the best chapters, in my opinion, are the two that mock the cliched Japanese over-dramatic plotlines, as we see Haruhi discovering she has to transfer and saying goodbye to everyone, followed by a life-or-death struggle to see who’s strongest on Children’s Day. Neither story has an ending, but endings don’t matter. Are they silly. Yes indeed. -Sean Gaffney

Pandora Hearts, Vol. 12 | By Jun Mochizuki | Yen Press – Pandora Hearts doesn’t have the most coherent plotting at the best of times, but volume twelve is more disjointed than most. There’s a lot of exposition here, as the focus shifts towards finding the seals (and their keys) that bind villainous Glen Baskerville and investigating a mysterious, murderous contractor known as “the headhunter.” We go from scenes of Vincent Nightray scheming to seduce Oz’s sister, to Oz’s uncle seeking to dispel the gloomy atmosphere at Pandora by hosting an outdoor tea party, to the group doing some snooping in disguise (with Oz in drag), to everyone attending a fancy dress banquet at the home of a creepy cult leader. This makes for some nice moments—I’m especially fond of the contrast between the female-filtered view of gussied-up Gilbert and the reality—but on the whole, the volume feels rather scattered. That’s not enough to keep me from recommending it, though! – Michelle Smith

Filed Under: Bookshelf Briefs

Digital update, Moyoco Anno, and more!

November 19, 2012 by Brigid Alverson

Yoko Tanigaki of Digital Manga answered a few of my questions about Digital’s print hiatus at Robot 6.

I looked at the most recent manga releases at MTV Geek, and the Manga Village team discussed their picks as well.

At Manga Bookshelf, Matt Blind pulls together the list of the past week’s manga best-sellers.

Sequential Tart’s Margaret O’Connell has a nice writeup of the Moyoco Anno panel at NYCC (part 1, part 2).

Check out part 2 of Nancy Thistlethwaite’s interview with Ai Ore creator Mayu Shinjo at the Shojo Beat Facebook page.

Starsamaria discusses the flow of time in shoujo manga at Shojo Corner.

MJ and Michelle Smith discuss the best of 2012 in their latest BL Bookrack column at Manga Bookshelf.

At Manga Therapy, Tony Yao discusses the significance of gold versus silver in Gin Tama.

News from Japan: A one-shot by JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure manga-ka Hirohiko Araki will appear in the February issue of the women’s magazine Spur. Saiyuki Ibun is back in Zero-Sum Ward after a 28-month hiatus due to creator Kazuya Minekura’s surgery. The Ishinomori Mangattan Museum, which honors Cyborg 009 creator Shotaro Ishinomori, reopened this past weekend after being closed since March 2011 due to earthquake damage.
Reviews

Lissa Pattillo on vol. 1 of Alice in the Country of Clover: Cheshire Cat Waltz (Kuriousity)
Lesley Aeschliman on vol. 5 of Angelic Layer (Blogcritics)
Matt on vol. 6 of Animal Land (Matt Talks About Manga)
Sheena McNeil on vol. 2 of Awkward Silence (Sequential Tart)
Ash Brown on vol. 15 of Blade of the Immortal (Experiments in Manga)
Sheena McNeil on vols. 1 and 2 of Bond of Dreams, Bond of Love (Sequential Tart)
Katherine Hanson on Butterfly 69 (Yuri no Boke)
Johanna Draper Carlson on vols. 3-6 of A Devil and Her Love Song (Comics Worth Reading)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 24 of Excel Saga (A Case Suitable for Treatment)
Jocelyne Allen on Genesis (Brain Vs. Book)
Rebecca Silverman on vol. 1 of Girl Friends (ANN)
J. Caleb Mozzocco on vol. 1 of Highschool of the Dead (Every Day Is Like Wednesday)
Lissa Pattillo on vol. 9 of Loveless (Kuriousity)
Sheena McNeil on vol. 4 of March Story (Sequential Tart)
Johanna Draper Carlson on vol. 1 of Missions of Love (Comics Worth Reading)
Michael Buntag on Ninja Girl Ko! Indie Special #1-2 and vol. 15 of Video Girl Ai (NonSensical Words)
Rebecca Silverman on vols. 63-65 of One Piece (ANN)
Sean Gaffney on vol. 65 of One Piece (A Case Suitable for Treatment)
Laura on vol. 1 of Paradise Kiss (Heart of Manga)
Lesley Aeschliman on vol. 5 of Pokemon Adventures Diamond and Pearl Platinum (Blogcritics)
Angela Eastman on Pokemon The Movie: White: Victini and Zekrom (The Fandom Post)
Lori Henderson on vols. 1 and 2 of Puella Magi Madoka Magica (Manga Village)
Sheena McNeil on vol. 2 of Punch Up! (Sequential Tart)
Leroy Doureseaux on vol. 10 of Rin-ne (The Comic Book Bin)
Carlo Santos on vol. 10 of Rosario + Vampire, Season II (ANN)
Rebecca Silverman on vol. 3 of Wandering Son (ANN)

Filed Under: MANGABLOG

Cross Game, Vol. 8

November 19, 2012 by Sean Gaffney

By Mitsuru Adachi. Released in Japan in 2 separate volumes by Shogakukan, serialized in the magazine Shonen Sunday. Released in North America by Viz.

And so, at last, after two delays (this was supposed to be out in July), we have the final volume of Cross Game. And perhaps the final Adachi in North America or a while, though I hope I’m wrong. If it is the last, though, at least we got this, a terrific story which both encompasses exactly what Adachi does best and also plays with his own cliches. Plus it’s one hell of a final game.

There’s a lot of flashbacks and flashforwards throughout the entire volume, as despite this being the big winner goes to the Koshien game, there’s a lot on everyone’s mind. Wakaba, her dream for Ko and Akaichi, and Akane’s surgery, all of which we are aware of. And Ko and Aoba’s conversation before the game, which we only get half of. Though I think we might be able to guess, especially given that Ko prefaces it by asking if he can lie. The flashbacks are all revelatory even as we reach the final volume. The old man who remembers Ko throwing baseballs against his wall with tears in his eyes is touching and sad, then we get Aoba’s own memories, as she catches him doing it. The manga has made it seem at times as if Ko coasts and doesn’t put in the work – this shows that he’s been doing it all along, but it’s a secret. Or a lie. Take your pick.

Some folks have noted they felt that the Akane plot was superfluous, but as I’ve stated before, I think that Adachi did that deliberately to contrast Aoba, so unlike his usual heroines, with Akane, who’s a carbon copy of the type he normally writes. Akane’s quite never-give-up attitude towards her surgery, her waking up to the satisfaction of seeing Akaishi hit an RBI for the first run of the game, and just generally being sweet. This is probably another reason why Cross Game was the perfect license for North America – we are a land which favors the Aobas of the world.

The game itself is a pitcher’s duel, of course, and Ko gets to show off both his batting and pitching chops. It’s the perfect game for a manga narrative (despite Aoba literally walking over to Adachi to suggest a plot at one point – it’s nice to see the 4th wall being broken right to the end), and the outcome is satisfying on both sides, even if one finds it bittersweet. And all that’s left is the realizations – not just Junpei and his marriage proposal/bet, but also Aoba, who understands as Ko walks towards her that Ko and Aoba were able to satisfy Wakaba’s dream. It’s a very emotional moment, and played as one.

But life goes on, and the final chapter is a scene of everyone getting ready for another trip – even if things have changed between the leads. Ko has always described himself as a liar, but it’s Aoba who gets the last word, with the biggest lie she’s ever told Even after she wonders to herself why she and Ko have to be so alike. A fitting end to a terrific series.

Filed Under: REVIEWS

Strobe Edge Volume 1 by Io Sakisaka

November 18, 2012 by Anna N

Strobe Edge Volume 1 by Io Sakisaka

I’m always curious when Shojo Beat announces a new title, and from the brief description I’d read of it Strobe Edge sounded appealing. While some of Shojo Beat’s recent offerings (Jiu Jiu and Devil and Her Love Song) have a bit of an edgy take on the genre, Strobe Edge is more of a straightforward high school love story.

Ninako is the heroine of Strobe Edge, and she is almost painfully naive. She blindly believes whatever salespeople tell her, and when she consults with her friends at school she allows their opinions to override her own feelings. She has a perpetually surprised look in the first chapter of the manga. As Ninako deals with her first romance, she begins to grow in awareness. All of Ninako’s friends expect that she’ll be going out with her childhood friend Daiki any day now. Daiki seems like a nice, boy-next door type who constantly finds excuses to check up on Ninako at school, unaware of the torrent of feminine gossip that he’ll unleash as soon as he disappears. Ninako cares for Daiki deeply, but she doesn’t even contemplate having any romantic feelings for Daiki until her friends tell her that she likes him. Ninako’s credulity is a bit hard to take, but Sakisaka manages to portray her personality as so fresh and innocent, I was willing to give it a pass in this first volume.

Ninako’s friend-determined destiny with Daiki is derailed when she keeps noticing the main crush object for all the girls, Ren Ichinose. Ren is cool and detached, so of course he’s the most popular boy in school. Ninako manages to have a conversation with Ren when he accidentally breaks her cellphone charm and then brings her a girly butterfly one as a replacement. She treasures it even though she’s not usually into super-feminine things. Daiki notices Ninako’s heightened interest in Ren and asks her if she’s a big fan of his, and she explains it by saying that she views him as if he was a model in a magazine, not someone she likes. But as Ninako keeps encountering Ren randomly on the subway back from school, she begins to see that he’s actually a very kind person instead of the aloof idol she envisioned. When she has a sprained ankle, he pretends to be asleep and deliberately misses his stop so he can walk her home. This is shoujo manga though, so of course there are plenty of additional complications for Ninako to deal with as she discovers her first love.

Sakisaka’s art is expressive and assured, and while I sometimes got a little tired of Ninako’s surprised face, she does certainly look like a sympathetic shoujo heroine. The character designes for the main and supporting cast are varied, making it easy to distinguish between all the characters. Sakisaka wrote at the begining of the volume that her goal in this manga was to capture “the sensation you feel in the window of time between one event and another,” and I think that Strobe Edge pulls it off. Ninako’s inner thoughts gradually become more self aware, and Sakisaka is very good at portraying the excitement and agony of accidentally sitting close to one’s crush object. One thing that I appreciated in Strobe Edge was that it was relatively angst free in terms of having evil protagonists. Daiki starts acting a bit erratic, but both he and Ren seem like basically good people. Even though Ninako’s friends have been pushing their own ideas of what her first relationship should be, when she makes a decision they are generally supportive. Reading a manga with basically nice characters just seems relaxing and refreshing at this point. Of course this is a 10 volume series, so I’m expecting an evil male model or an evil secret fiance to show up at some point. For now though, I’m going to be checking out this series with the hope that Ninako’s journey to self-awareness continues.

Review copy provided by the publisher.

Filed Under: MANGA REVIEWS Tagged With: Strobe Edge

Manga Bestsellers: 2012, Week Ending 18 November

November 18, 2012 by Matt Blind 1 Comment

Comparative Rankings Based on Consolidated Online Sales

last week’s charts
about the charts

##

Manga Bestsellers

1. ↔0 (1) : Sailor Moon 8 – Kodansha Comics, Nov 2012 [484.3] ::
2. ↔0 (2) : Naruto 59 – Viz Shonen Jump, Nov 2012 [424.8] ::
3. ↔0 (3) : Rosario+Vampire Season II 10 – Viz Shonen Jump Advanced, Nov 2012 [380.4] ::
4. ↑2 (6) : Vampire Knight 15 – Viz Shojo Beat, Nov 2012 [379.6] ::
5. ↑17 (22) : Sailor Moon vols 1-6 box set – Kodansha Comics, Nov 2012 [338.5] ::
6. ↓-1 (5) : Sailor Moon 1 – Kodansha Comics, Sep 2011 [322.7] ::
7. ↓-3 (4) : Negima! 36 – Kodansha Comics, Oct 2012 [319.3] ::
8. ↓-1 (7) : Sailor Moon 3 – Kodansha Comics, Jan 2012 [318.6] ::
9. ↓-1 (8) : Sailor Moon 4 – Kodansha Comics, Mar 2012 [314.4] ::
10. ↑4 (14) : Blue Exorcist 8 – Viz Shonen Jump Advanced, Nov 2012 [311.6] ::

[more]

Top Imprints
Number of volumes ranking in the Top 500:

Yen Press 115
Viz Shonen Jump 92
Viz Shojo Beat 51
Kodansha Comics 48
Viz Shonen Jump Advanced 40
Seven Seas 19
Dark Horse 18
Viz 14
Tokyopop 11
HC/Tokyopop 9

[more]

Series/Property

1. ↔0 (1) : Sailor Moon – Kodansha Comics [1,134.5] ::
2. ↔0 (2) : Naruto – Viz Shonen Jump [862.6] ::
3. ↑1 (4) : Bleach – Viz Shonen Jump [732.3] ::
4. ↓-1 (3) : Vampire Knight – Viz Shojo Beat [675.2] ::
5. ↔0 (5) : Black Butler – Yen Press [566.3] ::
6. ↔0 (6) : Rosario+Vampire – Viz Shonen Jump Advanced [564.6] ::
7. ↑1 (8) : Maximum Ride – Yen Press [493.7] ::
8. ↓-1 (7) : Negima! – Del Rey/Kodansha Comics [491.6] ::
9. ↔0 (9) : Soul Eater – Yen Press [438.8] ::
10. ↑1 (11) : One Piece – Viz Shonen Jump [424.6] ::

[more]

New Releases
(Titles releasing/released This Month & Last)

1. ↔0 (1) : Sailor Moon 8 – Kodansha Comics, Nov 2012 [484.3] ::
2. ↔0 (2) : Naruto 59 – Viz Shonen Jump, Nov 2012 [424.8] ::
3. ↔0 (3) : Rosario+Vampire Season II 10 – Viz Shonen Jump Advanced, Nov 2012 [380.4] ::
4. ↑2 (6) : Vampire Knight 15 – Viz Shojo Beat, Nov 2012 [379.6] ::
5. ↑17 (22) : Sailor Moon vols 1-6 box set – Kodansha Comics, Nov 2012 [338.5] ::
7. ↓-3 (4) : Negima! 36 – Kodansha Comics, Oct 2012 [319.3] ::
10. ↑4 (14) : Blue Exorcist 8 – Viz Shonen Jump Advanced, Nov 2012 [311.6] ::
13. ↑13 (26) : Bleach 51 – Viz Shonen Jump, Nov 2012 [296.2] ::
14. ↑5 (19) : Bleach 50 – Viz Shonen Jump, Nov 2012 [296.0] ::
17. ↑20 (37) : Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind 2 vol hardcover box set [complete] – Viz Ghibli Library, Nov 2012 [277.0] ::

[more]

Preorders

15. ↓-4 (11) : Sailor Moon 9 – Kodansha Comics, Jan 2013 [284.3] ::
25. ↓-5 (20) : Sailor Moon 10 – Kodansha Comics, Mar 2013 [228.3] ::
31. ↑4 (35) : Sailor Moon 12 – Kodansha Comics, Jul 2013 [203.5] ::
32. ↓-2 (30) : Sailor Moon 11 – Kodansha Comics, May 2013 [198.9] ::
74. ↑3 (77) : Negima! 37 – Kodansha Comics, Jan 2013 [129.7] ::
100. ↑19 (119) : A Certain Scientific Railgun 6 – Seven Seas, Dec 2012 [99.5] ::
106. ↓-2 (104) : Battle Angel Alita Last Order 16 – Kodansha Comics, Dec 2012 [96.9] ::
108. ↑5 (113) : Alice in the Country of Joker Circus & Liar’s Game 2 – Seven Seas, May 2013 [93.8] ::
113. ↑5 (118) : Negima! 38 – Kodansha Comics, Apr 2013 [90.0] ::
115. ↑6 (121) : Battle Angel Alita Last Order 17 – Kodansha Comics, Feb 2013 [89.0] ::

[more]

Manhwa

104. ↑42 (146) : March Story 4 – Viz Signature, Oct 2012 [97.6] ::
278. ↑86 (364) : Bride of the Water God 12 – Dark Horse, Nov 2012 [37.4] ::
342. ↓-28 (314) : Black God 17 – Yen Press, Oct 2012 [29.4] ::
594. ↑1 (595) : Bride of the Water God 11 – Dark Horse, May 2012 [14.0] ::
956. ↑ (last ranked 28 Oct 12) : Sarasah 1 – Yen Press, Jul 2009 [4.6] ::
1004. ↑518 (1522) : March Story 1 – Viz Signature, Oct 2010 [4.0] ::
1031. (new) : Manhwa Novella Collection 1 Lie to Me – Netcomics, Aug 2006 [3.7] ::
1132. ↑ (last ranked 26 Sep 10) : U Don’t Know Me – Netcomics, May 2009 [2.7] ::
1208. ↑42 (1250) : Bride of the Water God 10 – Dark Horse, Jan 2012 [2.1] ::
1281. ↑418 (1699) : March Story 2 – Viz Signature, Apr 2011 [1.6] ::

[more]

BL/Yaoi

103. ↓-35 (68) : Awkward Silence 2 – SuBLime, Oct 2012 [98.2] ::
107. ↓-6 (101) : Finder Series 6 Passion within the View Finder – DMP Juné, Jul 2012 [94.5] ::
148. ↓-36 (112) : Loveless 9 – Viz, Sep 2012 [70.8] ::
149. ↓-41 (108) : Honey*Smile – DMP Juné, Oct 2012 [70.0] ::
167. ↑33 (200) : Alice the 101st 3 – DMP DokiDoki, Jan 2013 [63.2] ::
177. ↑209 (386) : Punch Up! 2 – SuBLime, Oct 2012 [60.6] ::
233. ↓-61 (172) : Awkward Silence 1 – SuBLime, Jul 2012 [43.9] ::
354. ↑ (last ranked 28 Oct 12) : Sugar Milk – DMP Juné, Apr 2008 [28.0] ::
379. ↓-95 (284) : The Tyrant Falls in Love 7 – DMP Juné, Sep 2012 [26.3] ::
399. ↑593 (992) : Bond of Dreams, Bond of Love 2 – SuBLime, Nov 2012 [24.1] ::

[more]

Ebooks

34. ↓-3 (31) : Maximum Ride 1 – Yen Press, Jan 2009 [190.0] ::
49. ↓-10 (39) : Maximum Ride 5 – Yen Press, Dec 2011 [168.5] ::
50. ↓-9 (41) : Naruto 57 – Viz Shonen Jump, Jul 2012 [166.8] ::
66. ↔0 (66) : Naruto 56 – Viz Shonen Jump, May 2012 [135.8] ::
75. ↓-1 (74) : Maximum Ride 2 – Yen Press, Oct 2009 [129.6] ::
84. ↑2 (86) : Maximum Ride 3 – Yen Press, Aug 2010 [116.5] ::
88. ↓-28 (60) : Naruto 55 – Viz Shonen Jump, Mar 2012 [111.6] ::
90. ↓-9 (81) : Maximum Ride 4 – Yen Press, Apr 2011 [110.1] ::
95. ↑28 (123) : Naruto 54 – Viz Shonen Jump, Mar 2012 [105.2] ::
96. ↓-18 (78) : Rosario+Vampire 3 – Viz Shonen Jump Advanced, Oct 2008 [102.6] ::

[more]

Filed Under: Manga Bestsellers Tagged With: Manga Bestsellers

One Piece, Vol. 65

November 18, 2012 by Sean Gaffney

By Eiichiro Oda. Released in Japan by Shueisha, serialization ongoing in the magazine Weekly Shonen Jump. Released in North America by Viz.

I warn you in advance, this is another One Piece volume consisting primarily of one big fight, with many tiny little fights interspersed therein. Luckily, One Piece is dense enough that there’s still stuff to talk about even if the plot is mostly ‘Luffy hits the villain until he wins’.

One reason that the non-Luffy battles are so inconsequential is this is the big opportunity for Oda to show off how far his cast had improved in the two-year gap before the Fishman Island arc. There are some supposedly impressive mimi-bosses, but it’s notable that the only one who makes a really strong impression is the silliest, Zeo. It’s no coincidence that Zeo faces off against Brook, one of the silliest Straw Hat Pirates. He really is fantastically funny, and helps to liven up what might otherwise simply be a long stretch of battle. Usopp, too, has leveled up, and being who he is, gets to lampshade it. He doesn’t have to use fake balloon hammers or Sogeking anymore, he’s not tough enough to take on these bad guys with ease. Even Chopper has leveled up, coming to terms with his monster form and thus becoming able to control it.

The ongoing Fishman Island plot has been about racism, and this volume is no exception. It notes that Hody’s Fishman Uber Alles attitude may be stronger and angrier, but it’s also more hollow – he has no actual experience with what the Fishmen went through, but has merely grown up surrounded by a culture of hate. That’s not something easily changed, not even with a petition or really good thoughts. It has become, as the translation explicitly states, a holy war, and Neptune’s sons finally ask Luffy to do something that they cannot – wreck the entire island, reduce their past culture, with all its hatred, to smithereens.

This, of course, would fit the prophecy while not immediately spelling doom for everyone. Which is good, as this is also a good volume for seeing the good side of Fishman Island, and of One Piece heroes in general. You can always tell a character that Oda likes (even if they may be a villain) by their tendency not to give up even under the face of the worst adversity. Even the children watching the battle refuse to evacuate. And there’s a difference between this sort of strength and obsession, which is what we see from Hody and Vander Decken, who are perfectly happy with taking out countless innocents as long as they achieve their goals.

That said, I will admit to being a bit exhausted by this arc. It looks like it’s going to wrap up soon, for which I am thankful. I also wish we could have seen Nami and Robin do a bit more, but I can’t have everything. At least Sanji wasn’t too big an idiot this time. Next volume we wrap things up here and set off on a new adventure in the New World. Will we add a new crewman as well? I doubt it, but you never know with Luffy…

Filed Under: REVIEWS

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