Friday, May 22, 2020

#IReadsYou Review: KORGI Book One: Sprouting Wings

KORGI (BOOK 1): SPROUTING WINGS
TOP SHELF PRODUCTIONS – @topshelfcomix

CARTOONIST: Christian Slade
ISBN:  978-1-891830-90-7; paperback with French flaps (May 2007)
88pp, B&W interiors; full-color, double-spread cover; $10.00 U.S.

Korgi (Book 1): Sprouting Wings is a 2007 original graphic novel from writer-artist Christian Slade.  A paperback original with black and white interior art, Sprouting Wings is the first in a series of five graphic novels featuring a young woman and her “Korgi” pup.  The Korgi series is a pantomime or wordless comic, in which the story is told without word balloons, sound effects, caption boxes, or any other kind of text.  The Korgi series is ostensibly a children’s and young readers series, but it is also an “all-ages” series that children, teenage, and adult readers can enjoy.

The fifth and final entry in the series, Korgi (Book 5): End of Seasons, is due for release some time in 2020 (as of this writing).  Christian Slade is a comic book creator and former animator for the Walt Disney Company, where he worked on the 2003 animated feature film, Brother Bear.

Korgi (Book 1): Sprouting Wings opens with an introduction from one of the book's characters, “Wart.”  He is a frog-like creature that wears what looks like one of the “sorting hats” from the Harry Potter book series.  Because Korgi's narrative is wordless, Wart's introduction provides readers with information on such things as the story's setting, environment, characters, creatures, and history.

The story opens in a faraway, pastoral land of woods, mountains, lakes, cliffs, and, of course, villages.  “Korgi Hollow” is a village that is the home of the land's last known “Korgis” (which seem like a breed of the dog type known as the “Welsh Corgi”).  Korgis live with their companions, the woodland people known as “Mollies” (humans).  According to Wart, the Korgis made the Mollies, who have little strength and very few smarts, a stronger and happier community.  Even standing on all four paws, some Korgis are as tall as the Mollies.

We meet a Korgi pup named “Sprout,” and his young female Mollie companion, “Ivy.”  While harvesting berries with the rest of the Mollies and Korgis, Sprout chases a flying insect.  When he does not return, Ivy goes looking for him.  After they reunite, Sprout and Ivy go on a great adventure and face many dangers.  The most dangerous is the monster who lives beyond Korgi Hollow, the gigantic “Gallump,” who wants to make a soup out of Sprout and Ivy.  Can the two escape Gallump and his minions and also keep them from finding the locations of Korgi Hollow?

THE LOWDOWN:  I first read Korgi (Book 1): Sprouting Wings thanks to a review “galley” copy I received from the book's publisher, Top Shelf, back in 2007.  I never got around to reading the books that followed in the series, but I meant to do so.  My 2007 review of Sprouting Wings turned out to be an enduring favorite with readers.

Christian Slade’s art recalls the pen and ink book illustration of the first half of the 20th century.  The art is drawn entirely in pencil art, with Slade using cross-hatching and line work to add exacting detail to the drawings of characters and settings.  Slade's art also has that gentle lamp-lit quality found in some of Walt Disney's animated features and short films.  I think this Disney-esque style is perfect for a children’s illustrated book or comic book.  I see Korgi (Book 1): Sprouting Wings being as much a picture book as it is a graphic novel.

Sprouting Wings' story has a tender hook – a young heroine and her pet playing in the safe magical woodland.  The thrills, drama, and conflict come from the danger lurking behind a tree, like “Creephog, the creature that is always spying on Sprout and Ivy.  The villains are dangerous enough and so imaginatively designed and illustrated as to interest a young reader.  In fact, the danger and thrills are considerably less intense than the content found in some of Walt Disney's most beloved and famous animated features.  Nothing in Korgi (Book 1): Sprouting Wings is as scary as the enormous black dragon into which Maleficent transforms in Sleeping Beauty (1959).

There is something about Korgi (Book 1): Sprouting Wings that I find attractive – something more than the prettiness of the art.  That something may be that Slade's illustrations make me think of J.R.R. Tolkien's beloved children's fantasy novel, The Hobbit (1937), which I have read more times than I can remember.  Heck, if you gotta remind a reader of something he loved as a child, there aren't too many better reminders than The Hobbit.

I READS YOU RECOMMENDS:  Comic book readers who enjoy all-ages comic books like Andy Runton's Owly series and also Jeff Smith’s Bone comic book and graphic novel series may also like Korgi (Book 1): Sprouting Wings.

A-
7.5 out of 10

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"


The text is copyright © 2020 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for reprint and syndication rights and fees.


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Thursday, May 21, 2020

#IReadsYou Review: A CERTAIN MAGICAL INDEX Volume 21

A CERTAIN MAGICAL INDEX, VOL. 21
YEN PRESS

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

MANGAKA: Chuya Kogino
ORIGINAL STORY: Kazuma Kamachi
CHARACTER DESIGNS: Kiyotaka Haimura
TRANSLATION: Andrew Prowse
LETTERS: Phil Christie
ISBN: 978-1-9753-3198-6; paperback (April 2020); Rated “T” for “Teen”
194pp, B&W, $13.00 U.S., $17.00 CAN

A Certain Magical Index is a Japanese light novel series written by Kazuma Kamachi and illustrated by Kiyotaka Haimura.  It has been published by ASCII Media Works (a brand company of Kadokawa Future Publishing) under their “Dengeki Bunko” imprint since April 2004.

A Certain Magical Index has been adapted into two manga series.  Chuya Kogino has adapted and illustrated the manga that is directly based on the novels.  Kogino's A Certain Magical Index began serialization in the May 2007 issue of Square Enix's Monthly Shonen Gangan.  Yen Press is publishing an English language adaptation of Kogino's manga as a graphic novel series, also entitled A Certain Magical Index.

A Certain Magical Index is set in a world where supernatural abilities exist.  Touma Kamijou is a high school student who has an unusual ability; his right hand is the “Imagine Breaker.”  It has the ability to negate any supernatural power, but it also negates Touma's own luck.  Touma lives in Academy City, a scientific marvel of the modern world where superhuman abilities are artificially cultivated and commonplace.  Touma meets an English nun named “Index,” or maybe she thinks she's a nun.  Touma's abilities and his relationship with Index prove dangerous to many entities that want to discover the secrets behind him, Index, and Academy City.

As A Certain Magical Index, Vol. 21 (Chapters 123 to 128) opens, protests against Academy City have broken out worldwide, and the never-ending tensions between the forces of magic and science escalate even further.  Who truly stands to benefit from the specter of conflict, and can anything be done to prevent the worst-case scenario?

Touma finds himself confronted by a mysterious old woman who turns out to be Monaka Oyafune, one of Academy City's board of directors.  She sends him on a mission to Avignon, France to discover who is really the mastermind behind the protests against Academy City.  Accompanied by his friend, Motoharu Tsuchimikado, and assisted by a young female magician, Itsuwa, Touma will find himself facing a most fierce enemy, Terra of the Left, a member of “God's Right Seat.”

I had never heard of the A Certain Magical Index manga, nor of the light novel series upon which it is based.  I had to learn about the series when my Yen Press media rep sent me a review copy of the manga.

A Certain Magical Index Graphic Novel Volume 21 is the one I received.  After some intense Internet research, including using Wikipedia and Google, I had some information on the series' publishing history, adaptations and mythopoeia.  I figured out enough to enjoy Vol. 21, and I can see how some readers would drawn into the complicated, complex, and multi-layered world of A Certain Magical Index, both light novels and manga.

I certainly enjoyed the art by Chuya Kogino, who both adapts the novels and draws the manga.  His multi-genre style is appropriate both for the action-fantasy elements of A Certain Magical Index and its comic moments.  I would read practically any manga Kogino illustrated.

The English translation by Andrew Prowse deftly conveys the large cast of characters and the multiple competing interests and conflicts.  I can say that Vol. 21 is good enough to make a new reader consider going back to the beginning of manga series, and giving it a try.

7 out of 10

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"


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Wednesday, May 20, 2020

#IReadsYou Review: WWE #1

WWE No. 1
BOOM! STUDIOS – @boomstudios

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

STORY: Dennis Hopeless
ART: Serg Acuna
COLORS: Doug Garbark
LETTERS: Jim Campbell
EDITORS: Jasmine Amiri and Eric Harburn
COVER: Dan Mora
VARIANT COVER ARTISTS: Jamal Campbell; Rob Guillory; Oliver Barrett; Adam Riches; Brent Schoonover; Scott Newman; Corbyn Kern; Daniel Warren Johnson; Mike Henderson; Fabio Valle; Nakia Mann; Audrey Mok; Jerry Gaylord
24pp, Colors, 3.99 U.S.(January 2017)

“Breaking of The Shield”

WWE (World Wrestling Entertainment) is an American integrated media company and entertainment company known primarily as a professional wrestling league.  It is also a media and entertainment brand that includes licensed products like toys and clothing... and comic books.

As far as I can tell, the first WWE licensed comic books were first published a decade ago.  First, Titan Books of the United Kingdom published their wrestling comic book, WWE Heroes, with publication dates both in 2010 and 2011.  NBM Publishing, under its “Super Genius” imprint, published a comic book, WWE Superstars, with publication dates beginning in 2013 and possibly ending in 2016.

Beginning in 2016, BOOM! Studios published several “WWE” branded comic books, including an ongoing series, WWE, that ran for 25 issues from 2017 to 2019.  The main story in each issue of WWE was produced by the creative team of writer Dennis Hopeless; artist Serg Acuna; colorist Doug Garbark; and letterer Jim Campbell, as far as I can tell, for the duration of the series.

WWE #1 (“Breaking of The Shield”) opens with Seth Rollins, a member “The Shield,” one of the most dominant factions in WWE history, winning his latest match.  Seth, the ultimate opportunist, uses his victory to split with his partners in The Shield, Roman Reigns and Dean Ambrose.  Seth apparently betrays his mates at the best of the legendary wrestler, “Triple H,” the self-styled “King of Kings” who is now the authority in control of WWE.

Now, Seth is eager to prove that he is ready to fight for the “WWE Championship,” but his ambition puts him on a collision course with his former brothers.  And just what are Triple H's plans for Seth Rollins... really?

I never thought I would say this, but I liked WWE #1.  I was a wrestling fan as a 'tween, but after that, I rarely watched any matches on television.  In the time since then, I have sometimes watched a few minutes of professional wrestling produced by the WWE (formerly the WWF) and a few other pro wrestling organizations.  I find myself mildly interested, but watching pro wrestling would mean cutting into time I give to other entertainment and pastimes.

WWE #1 interests me because writer Dennis Hopeless tells an intriguing tale in the worlds of professional sports and in the entertainment industry.  That is the story of an ambitious ladder-climber who will betray any and everyone for his shot at making it to the top.  Such blind ambition can get you what you want, but that sometimes comes at the cost of losing things, both exterior (friends, family, colleagues, etc.) and interior (self-respect, peace of mind, pride, etc.).  By telling such a story, Hopeless sets up the WWE's atmosphere both of intrigue and backstabbing and of hope and glory, which could make for an engaging comic book series.

Artist Serg Acuna captures the brawniness and vitality of the wrestlers and also the pro wrestlers' propensity to strike quickly at opponents and adversaries.  Acuna's compositions have energy and suggest a sense of movement, and that is well served by Doug Garbark's tone-perfect coloring.  Letterer Jim Campbell pounds out the story in lettering that smartly tends to hang at the edges of the panels.  This doubles the power of the story, which is told in muscular illustrations and in Hopeless' straightforward dialogue and exposition.

I am not saying that WWE #1 is great, but it is quite good.  The highest praise that I can give it is to say that I will seek out WWE back issues.

7.5 out of 10

[This comic book features the back-up story, “The New Day's Optimistic Odyssey” Part 2, written by Ross Thibodeaux; drawn by Rob Guillory; colored by Taylor Wells; and lettered by Jim Campbell.]

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"


The text is copyright © 2020 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for reprint and syndication rights and fees.


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Tuesday, May 19, 2020

#IReadsYou Review: AFTER-SCHOOL BITCHCRAFT Volume 1

AFTER-SCHOOL BITCHCRAFT, VOL. 1
YEN PRESS

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

STORY: Yu Shimizu
ART: Kazuma Ichihara
TRANSLATION: Christine Dashiell
LETTERS: Phil Christie
ISBN: 978-1-9753-9922-1; paperback (March 2020); Rated “OT” for “Older Teen”
194pp, B&W with some color pages, $13.00 U.S., $17.00 CAN

Hokago Bitchcraft is a manga from writer Yu Shimizu and artist Kazuma Ichihara.  Yen Press is publishing an English language edition of the manga in North America as a series of graphic novels, entitled After-School Bitchcraft.

After-School Bitchcraft, Vol. 1 (Chapters 1 to 6) introduces high school student, Ririka Kirise, a “gyaru,” or “party-girl fashion” type.  This style-savvy high school girl is also serious about keeping up with her chemistry class, although she struggles with the subject.  Looking for some help, she opens the door to her teacher's office and inadvertently breaks his magic barrier in the process.

It seems that Renji Fuyumi is both a high school teacher and a sorcerer.  Unbeknownst to Renji, Ririka also has the makings of being a sorceress herself.  Before she knows it, Ririka is Renji's apprentice, and she finds herself wrapped up in the world of witchcraft and stuck in some sticky situations.

[This volume includes four color pages; an “Extra” manga (Episode 4.5); an “Afterword” by Yu Shimizu and Kazuma Ichihara; and “Translation Notes.”]

The After-School Bitchcraft manga has an unusual name.  What is “bitchcraft?”

After-School Bitchcraft Graphic Novel Volume 1 does not introduce us to a high school teenage girl who is a “bitch,” not as far as I can tell.  The first volume presents, in Ririka, a girl who is very powerful, but who is more of a “klutz” or “ditz” type.  However, she is a likable, and readers may find themselves wanting to discover the world of magic through her eyes.  Writer Yu Shimizu, who is also an author of light novels, hints at a complicated and dangerous world of magic that Shimizu is bound to unveil before readers' eyes as the series unfolds.

The art and storytelling by artist Kazuma Ichihara is playful and is filled with “fanservice,” in the form of panty-shots, T&A, and Ririka's curvy figure and bountiful bosoms (which always seem ready to burst forth like eager and playful puppies).  Christine Dashiell's translation plays up the aspects of this story that are a sexy romp and teases the parts of the story that deal with this world of mysterious magic.  Letterer Phil Christie splashes fonts and word balloons across the pages that make this story pop even when it is being teasing and frivolous.

I don't know if After-School Bitchcraft will be exceptional, but the first volume does make me curious about the second volume.  Plus, it is hard to resist Vol. 1's cover art, which features the number “1” emblazoned in red on Ririka's ample left breast.

7 out of 10

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"


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The text is copyright © 2020 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for syndication rights and fees.


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Monday, May 18, 2020

BOOM! Studios from Diamond Distributors for May 20, 2020

BOOM! STUDIOS

FEB201298    BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER #14 CVR A MAIN LOPEZ    $3.99
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FEB201326    JIM HENSON STORYTELLER GHOSTS #2 (OF 4) CVR A WALSH    $3.99
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JAN209131    JIM HENSON STORYTELLER GHOSTS #2 (OF 4) FOC STRIPS BONVILLAI    $3.99

Dark Horse Comics from Diamond Distributors for May 20, 2020

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DC Comics from Diamond Distributors for May 20, 2020

DC COMICS

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