CSBG Archive
Danielle Leigh’s Reading Diary — 1/11/09
Okay, I’ve got a big stack piling up and if I don’t talk about it soon the crushing guilt won’t allow me to read more manga. Which is my thing, dontchaknow. You probably already did.
Today I share very brief reactions to the following:
Andromeda Stories vol 1 by Ryu Mitsuse and Keiko Takemiya
Batman: Death Mask by Yoshinori Natsume
Blank Slate vol 2 by Aya Kanno
Shinobi Life vol 1 Shoko Conami
Andromeda Stories vol 1 by Ryu Mitsuse and Keiko Takemiya — another shonen sci-fi epic from Takemiya, who draws this title. Unfortunately, it shows. The worldbuilding is fairly shallow and none of the characters made much of an impression on me. Basic plot: a medieval-ish world is about to be taken over by….machines. From outer space. Yeah. I’m skipping volume 2 and 3 of this title based on the weakness of volume 1.
Check out Takemiya’s classic sci-fi epic To Terra instead.
Batman: Death Mask by Yoshinori Natsume. Yup, the supposedly “manga-fied” version of Batman, except to me it looked and read like a regular mediocre Batman comic created by an American. Natsume ties the story to Japan by flash-backing to Bruce Wayne’s training as a young man at a dojo there, but really there was nothing remarkable about this book, so much so I’ve already forgotten the plot. Masks and really lame metaphors were involved. The art was serviceable and like a lot of manga artists, Natsume can’t draw older people very well. Sadly, his adult Bruce Wayne is apparently an “older person” in his take on the character. Complaints about the art aside, the real crime this book commits is being boring.
I’d rather watch Batman Begins again if I’m after cool a training sequence and a plot that makes the heart race.
Blank Slate vol 2 by Aya Kanno — Don’t read this for the plot but for the amazing and moody art by Kanno. This is noir-ish story about an amnesiac assassin, but really, it is all about very pretty men doing violent things. Sometimes to each other. Did I mention the pretty?
Kanno’s Otomen — about a boy who struggles with his desire to do “girly” things — is a much, much better book and it will be out in February.
Shinobi Life vol 1 Shoko Conami. I adored this wacky shojo story about a ninja, Kagetora, from the past who suddenly finds himself stranded in the modern era. He mistakenly thinks Beni, a lonely and rebellious teenager, is the princess he was sworn to protect. Beni is surprisingly well-rounded as a character – she may come from a cold home, but she has a good heart and can’t find it in herself to send Kagetora away even though she guiltily allows him to risks his own life for her in the name of his princess who lived hundreds of years ago. There is conflict, of course, about the fact Beni is a modern and fairly coarse girl, but over time Kagetora learns to see past his own (very loaded) belief system about honor and duty and see Beni for herself, not for the “Princess” he assumes she must be. I loved the relationship between these two characters and even though “time travel” seems like a ridiculous plot device, Conami worked it so well by emphaszing character development that it is easy to forgive such a silly catalyst for the story.
Very enjoyable romance title I would recommend to us shojo lovers. I hope to pick up the second volume in the spring (let us keep our fingers crossed Tokyopop is able to release it!)
- Posted on January 11, 2009 @ 07:29 PM






11 Comments
Grico
January 11, 2009 at 9:02 pm
Hmm, Shinobi Life sounds interesting. I still have pile of manga, light novels and comics to read from christmas/new years though.
jun
January 12, 2009 at 6:33 am
I really liked Shinobi Life, too. Much more than I’d anticipated.
Danielle Leigh
January 12, 2009 at 7:45 am
hi Grico and Jun — yes, Shinobi Life is really charming and from the cover I didn’t expect to like it as much as I did. I only think I bought it because Jun gave it such a positive review and we have very close tastes (I like BL more but on most everything else we seem to agree.)
jun
January 12, 2009 at 8:36 am
Ooh, yay! I love having influenced a purchase decision!
I don’t dislike BL, I just don’t read a lot of it. I do own a bunch that’s sitting in my to-read pile. I actually read two BL things this weekend, too.
jun
January 12, 2009 at 8:38 am
Oh Shinobi, did you feel, as I did, that there was something extra good about the English adaptation? I mean, I don’t go around normally noticing such things, but I really liked Beri’s dialogue. Like, in the scene where Kagetora is asking if it’s okay to fight someone as long as he doesn’t use weapons, and she thinks and says, “Yeah. Sounds good.” Just… perfect response for her character.
Danielle Leigh
January 12, 2009 at 10:07 am
I’m actually going to do a re-read of the volume to “savor” it a little more and I’ll be careful to pay attention to the english adaptation — I remember liking it quite a bit though, just don’t remember particulars.
Let me know if you need any BL recs — ther are some hidden gems amid all the crap that gets put out in English.
Danielle Leigh
January 12, 2009 at 10:10 am
also, I don’t think you “dislike” BL or anything — I just consider myelf a “fan” of it, when done right, and know that you probably wouldn’t consider yourself a fan. Which is obviously fine, as far as I’m concerned, it just is one of the few differences in how we approach manga as entertainment that I’ve seen.
jun
January 12, 2009 at 11:02 am
I’d love BL recs.
I think I might be almost a fan. I like anything that’s good, but I’m not, like, squeeful over BL.
Danielle Leigh
January 12, 2009 at 11:40 am
I haven’t felt inspired to write a column in a while — if I feel like I’m talking a particular audience *cough* you *cough* maybe that will help me write something about decent BL available in english.
jun
January 13, 2009 at 6:08 am
I promise to read it.
MangaBlog » Blog Archive » Quickies
January 14, 2009 at 5:17 am
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