The Manga Curmudgeon

Spending too much on comics, then talking too much about them

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Flower power

April 14, 2008 by David Welsh

The Beat is the first to share this year’s list of Eisner Award nominations, and many of them make me very, very happy. None quite so much as this one:

Best Writer/Artist
Fumi Yoshinaga, Flower of Life; The Moon and Sandals (Digital Manga)

See? A panel of experts agrees that Yoshinaga is awesome, so go out and buy all of the available volumes of Flower of Life, thus pressuring DMP into releasing the fourth.

Filed Under: Awards and lists, Linkblogging

Summer reading

April 11, 2008 by David Welsh

Okay, so Previews order forms are due tomorrow. I never promised to be timely, and there’s good stuff available.

I’ve made my feelings about Kaoru Mori’s Emma abundantly clear, so I’m excited the follow-up, Shirley (CMX). It’s a collection of shorts about English maids, and I’m sure it will be lovely. (Page 125.)

I’m not really the audience for books about making comics, but I admire the work of Jessica (La Perdida) Abel and Matt (Odds Off or, L’Amour Foutu) Madden enormously, so I’m sure Drawing Words & Writing Pictures (First Second) will be a valuable resource. (Page 291.)

Though I’m convinced there must be many more juicy and telling crimes from the Victorian era, Rick Geary’s shift to A Treasury of 20th Century Murder won’t keep me from greedily consuming The Lindbergh Child (NBM). Geary’s true-crime comics are some of the best reads out there. (Page 317.)

A new comic from Hope Larson is always cause for celebration. Simon & Schuster offers Chiggers, a tale of summer-camp complications between two best friends. (Page 332.)

There’s something about Akira Toriyama’s Dragon Ball books that puts me off, but I’ve liked what I’ve read of his silly, charming Dr. Slump. Viz rolls out another all-ages adventure, Cowa!, which has the added benefit of starring baby monsters. (Page 374.)

Enticing as the prospect of a new shot at Takehiko Inoue’s Slam Dunk is, I think I’m more excited about the impending arrival of his series, Real (Viz). It’s another sports series, this time about wheelchair basketball, and it won the Excellence Prize at the 2001 Japan Media Arts Festival. (Page 379.)

They aren’t exactly debuts, but I’m happy to see new installments of former ICE Kunion titles showing up in rotation from Yen Press. I’m particularly looking forward to the second volume of Soo Hee Park’s Goong, the tale of an ordinary girl set to marry a member of the royal family. (Page 382.)

Filed Under: CMX, First Second, NBM, Previews, Simon and Schuster, Viz, Yen Press

Aurora borealis

April 10, 2008 by David Welsh

There’s a new Flipped up over at The Comics Reporter. Michael Perry of Aurora was kind enough to subject himself to my “interview technique” and tell me all about the multifaceted new publisher.

Filed Under: Aurora, Flipped

Wishful linking

April 9, 2008 by David Welsh

I should just start a category dedicated to piggybacking on Danielle Leigh’s posts over at Comics Should Be Good. In her latest, she delivers a wish list to manga publishers. Here are some of my additions:

I wish for more translation and cultural notes! Some publishers are consistently generous with these (Dark Horse, Del Rey, Go! Comi, etc.), and some are flat-out stingy. I’ve noticed that Viz has been adding these to some of their recent Shojo Beat releases, which is terrific, but I would love for this to become standard practice so I can start complaining that they aren’t extensive enough instead of nonexistent.

I wish for more money to be thrown away on commercially iffy projects! I know this is impractical, but, hey, it’s a wish list. And while I don’t want to see more series abandoned before they’re completed, I would love it if publishers delivered more commercially counter-intuitive offerings every now and then. Okay, so I might be the only person who buys a manga about, say, retirees who decide to spend their golden years traveling, or stories about Japan’s agricultural bureaucracy or new mothers navigating playground culture, but I might not be, and you’d make me very happy.

I wish books I really like would come out either faster or slower! There seems to be no happy medium here. Either I feel like I’m waiting forever for a new volume of Mushishi or Hikaru No Go or that I can’t possibly keep up with some series or another. Please be more sensitive to my utterly unpredictable whims.

Filed Under: Linkblogging

Upcoming 4/9/2008

April 8, 2008 by David Welsh

I’m so confused by this week’s shipping list. Things seem to have reappeared in spite of having shipped a while ago, or at least they were listed as arrivals on previous weeks. Ah well.

Surely the pick of the week will be the second volume of Joann Sfar’s The Rabbi’s Cat (Pantheon). The first collection of this series was my introduction to Sfar’s work, and it was love at first sight. I can’t wait to catch up with the philosophical feline.

Has the third volume of Yuki Urushibara’s splendid Mushishi (Del Rey) been in bookstores for a while and is just now arriving in comic shops? Possibly. I reviewed it a couple of weeks ago, and I recommend it to anyone who likes smart, heartfelt science fiction and fantasy.

While I don’t feel any urgency to run out and pick up the new volume of Kanako Inuki’s Presents (CMX) the day they come out, I always pick it up eventually. Aside from its old-school horror charms, this series is an excellent palate cleanser. The short stories of gifts gone wrong and horrible things happening to terrible people are very pleasant diversions to enjoy between chunkier series.

Speaking of pleasant diversions, Shin Mashiba’s Nightmare Inspector: Yumekui Kenbun (Viz) certainly counts. It’s certainly not the best paranormal-investigator manga you could select, but given how many entries there are in that category, that’s hardly a damning criticism. People plagued with bad dreams turn to Hiruko for help, though they shouldn’t expect any sympathy, and Mashiba turns out some amusing, generally effective episodes as a result. Mashiba’s beautiful, detailed artwork is the strongest selling point for this series.

Filed Under: CMX, ComicList, Del Rey, Pantheon, Viz

More geek cred

April 8, 2008 by David Welsh

In another example of nerds making good, Junot Díaz has won the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for fiction for The Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao (Riverhead Books). It’s a really superb book, almost miraculously so since it’s primarily about an undersexed, comic-loving geek. (Seriously, that’s a category of fiction that’s closing in on hip novels about twenty-somethings trying to break into the publishing industry.)

Filed Under: Awards and lists, Prose

Risky business

April 7, 2008 by David Welsh

Writing for The New York Times, Matt Richtel reports that blogging can be fatal:

“Two weeks ago in North Lauderdale, Fla., funeral services were held for Russell Shaw, a prolific blogger on technology subjects who died at 60 of a heart attack. In December, another tech blogger, Marc Orchant, died at 50 of a massive coronary. A third, Om Malik, 41, survived a heart attack in December.

“Other bloggers complain of weight loss or gain, sleep disorders, exhaustion and other maladies born of the nonstop strain of producing for a news and information cycle that is as always-on as the Internet.”

Pace yourselves, people.

Filed Under: Media

Publish and/or perish

April 4, 2008 by David Welsh

Writing for The Star-Ledger, Beth Fitzgerald takes a look at the precarious state of Borders. What makes this piece particularly interesting to me is the initial emphasis on customer reaction to the prospect of losing their chain of choice.

Writing for The New York Times, Motoko Rich reports on an effort by HarperCollins to trim the fat. Launching a new imprint, they hope to trade big advances for profit sharing and (even more interesting for people who follow the ins and outs of the Direct Market) eliminating returnability of unsold product:

“Under standard practices, booksellers can return unsold books, saddling publishers with the high costs of shipping and pulping copies. Mr. [Robert S.] Miller [former founding publisher of Hyperion and new HarperColins hire] said the publishers could share with authors any savings from eliminating returns. A spokeswoman for Barnes & Noble declined to comment on HarperCollins’ plans.”

Filed Under: Bookstores, Prose

Pinky swear

April 4, 2008 by David Welsh

It’s a little strange to constantly expect bloody criminal violence to erupt in a shôjo romantic comedy, but that’s the effect Kiyo Fujiwara’s Wild Ones (Viz) had on me. That it doesn’t is both a relief and a disappointment.

Sachie’s mother has died, and her future is uncertain until her maternal grandfather arrives to take Sachie into his home. Sachie had been told he was dead, so she’s understandably suspicious. She’s even more anxious when she realizes that Grandpa is the leader of a yakuza faction.

Now Sachie has a new school and a house full of tattooed, scarred toughs to deal with, along with the realization that her generally straightforward mother lied to her (for admittedly good reasons). The thugs all dote on her like she’s an adorable kitten they found out in the rain. Grandpa is a little aloof, but he obviously adored Sachie’s mother and seems to have transferred those affections to his granddaughter. And not all of Grandpa’s minions are leathery hoodlums.

Yes, there’s a boy, and his name is Rakuto. He’s class president at Sachie’s school, and Grandpa has given him the task of protecting Sachie. She finds Rakuto unnervingly devoted, and she’s not sure if it’s genuine or if he’s just following orders. He’s dreamy, sure, but is he sincere?

Everything that actually happens in the comic is pleasant enough. The thugs are actually pretty loveable in a ridiculous way, as when they try and find an appropriate birthday gift for the girl. Sachie’s ambivalence about Rakuto is credible and hits some nice emotional notes. But gangster-story expectations kept distracting me.

Fujiwara tends to gloss over Grandpa’s business, which left me to look for traces of it on the fringes. Rakuto explains that Grandpa took him in after his father succumbed to bad debts, and that all of the men in the house arrived under similar circumstances. It’s supposed to illustrate Grandpa’s unlikely benevolence, but it just led me to suspect that he killed all of their parents and took in the boy children to swell his ranks.

It’s not that I want Grandpa’s elegant compound to be riddled with rival gunfire, or for undercover investigators to try and turn Sachie between classes. I’m not sure what it would do to the amiability of the rest of the narrative. But the absence of actual criminal behavior in a criminal milieu is undeniably odd; it’s like a werewolf story where none of the chapters take place during the full moon.

Okay, maybe I do want a few shootouts and undercover stings.

(This review is based on a complimentary copy provided by the publisher. And yes, I know that gun control is extraordinarily strict in Japan and that a shootout is extremely unlikely. You know what I mean.)

Filed Under: From the stack, Viz

Hustle and bustles

April 3, 2008 by David Welsh

Apologies for the last couple of days of backsliding. I’m back to normal with a new edition of Flipped, with a look at Kaoru Mori’s delightful maid manga, Emma (CMX).

Filed Under: CMX, Flipped

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