Showing posts with label John Werry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Werry. Show all posts

Saturday, November 14, 2015

Review: YUKARISM Volume 4

YUKARISM, VOL. 4
VIZ MEDIA – @VIZMedia

MANGAKA: Chika Shiomi
TRANSLATION/ENGLISH ADAPTATION: John Werry
LETTERS: Rina Mapa
ISBN: 978-1-4215-7971-9; paperback (November 2015); Rated “T” for “Teen”
200pp, B&W, $9.99 U.S., $12.99 CAN, £6.99 UK

It seems as if VIZ Media published the first volume yesterday.  However, the English-language, graphic novel publication of Yukarism, the nostalgia-tinted historical romance, has come to an end.  Created by Chika Shiomi, this manga follows an accomplished teenaged author who can slip into time and  assume his past life as a courtesan.

As a 17-year-old high school student, Yukari Kobayakawa is already an accomplished author.  Yukari's historical novels are set in Japan's Edo Period of the early 1800s, of which he writes about with amazingly accurate detail.  Shockingly, Yukari has the ability to slip into a past life in the Edo period, where he is a beautiful, renowned courtesan (Oiran) named Yumurasaki.

As Yukarism, Vol. 4 (Chapters 14 to 17) opens, Yukari is confronted by his ailing health.  He seems to be afflicted by Yumurasaki's fatal illness from the past, and the reason may be because Yukari is spending more and more time in the past.

Yukari is apparently also taking his compatriots into the past.  In the past, fellow student, Mahoro Tachibana, was Shizuka Takamura, a witch-doctor who was in love with Yumurasaki.  In the Edo past, his temporary housekeeper, Katsuhiko Satomi, was Kazuma, Yumurasaki's bodyguard.  Caught in the mystic energies of the past, Mahoro believes that Kazuma killed Yumurasaki, so now, she must kill Satomi to save a life.  Are the three fated to repeat their tragic connection?

[This volume includes bonus manga.]

Like Chika Shiomi's prior series, the Yukarism manga is a short-run manga.  Yukarism Volume 4 is the final volume of this series.  The story is a fireworks-like display of mystic energies and time-shifting that rivals Steve Ditko's Doctor Strange comics.

The short bio at the back of this volume states that one of Shiomi's favorite artists is Gustav Klimt, and I can see the Klimt-ish in her art.  This final volume is filled with pages of lovely art, including many pages with big close-ups of romantic moments.  There is a happy ending, but it is as melancholy as it is sparkly and fizzy.  I like that Shiomi insists on complicating the little things and the big things.  Even here, the typical must be at least a little atypical.

Fans of Chika Shiomi will have four easy volumes in which to love the Shojo Beat title, Yukarism.

A-

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux


The text is copyright © 2015 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for reprint and syndication rights and fees.


Friday, October 23, 2015

Saturday, September 5, 2015

Review: ONE-PUNCH MAN Volume 1

ONE-PUNCH MAN, VOL. 1
VIZ MEDIA – @VIZMedia

STORY: ONE
ART: Yusuke Murata
TRANSLATION: John Werry
LETTERS: James Gaubatz
ISBN: 978-1-4215-8564-2; paperback (September 2015); Rated “T” for “Teen”
208pp, B&W, $9.99 U.S., $12.99 CAN, £6.99 U.K.

Created by manga creator, ONE, One-Punch Man began as a web comic.  It quickly went viral and garnered over 10 million hits.  Japanese manga publisher, Shueisha (which is also VIZ Media's parent company), eventually secured the publishing rights to the series.  One-Punch Man was remade, with acclaimed manga artist, Yusuke Murata, best known for his work on the football series, Eyeshield 21, as the series' new artist.

One-Punch Man is the name of the man and the manga.  When he was 22-years-old, Saitama started training to be a superhero.  Now, 25-years-old, Saitama is a superhero.  He just does not look like it, with his lifeless facial expression, his bald head, and his unimpressive physique.  But he beats the snot out of supervillains with one punch.

As One-Punch Man, Vol. 1 (entitled One Punch; Chapters 1 to 8) begins, Saitama is in danger of being bored to death.  He just beat the latest city-wrecking villain with one punch.  He beats another, and another, and even an invasion of subterranean monsters.  Then, a girl who controls a mega-mosquito swarm and a cyborg teen named “Genos” arrive in City Z.

[This volume includes bonus manga.]

Digital manga readers already have access to Vols. 1-7 of the One-Punch Man manga via VIZManga.com and the VIZ MANGA App for the iPad®, iPhone® and iPod® touch, Android-powered smart phones and tablets.  Those same volumes can also be purchased through the Nook, Kindle, Kobo, comiXology, iBooks and GooglePlay stores.

VIZ Media is simultaneously publishing the first two volumes of One-Punch Man in print editions.  For a limited time, readers could read the first three chapters of One-Punch Man Volume 1 for free at VIZManga.com.  As entertaining as those first three chapters are, however, they do not do justice to the out-sized fun of One-Punch Man.

I love the superhero anime, Tiger & Bunny, and its manga adaptation, and I love One-Punch Man because it is a blast of superhero fun done in a different way.  Tiger & Bunny is a Japanese take on superheroes that is eccentric, but would not really seem like the odd-comic-out if placed among American superhero comic books.

One-Punch Man is a shonen battle manga with a superhero as its lead character and protagonist, but all the other characters (at least early in the narrative) are staples of shonen action fantasy.  One-Punch Man's writer, who goes by the name, ONE, unleashes his inner kid as he unleashes a series of monsters, demons, minions, man-beasts, and evil men on one hapless city after another.  Mass mayhem and destruction ensue.

Artist Yusuke Murata brings ONE's imagination to life in graphical storytelling that epitomizes the “dynamic storytelling” that Stan Lee pitched with gusto in How to Draw Comics the Marvel Way.  Also, the art is so pretty, so detailed, and so full of texture and magnitude.  I love this manga, and I think that if you keep reading past the first three chapters, you will love it, also.

A

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux


The text is copyright © 2015 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for reprint and syndication rights and fees.