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Manga Reviews

New Shojo From Vertical – Limit and Paradise Kiss

Limit by Keiko Suenobu volume 1

After reading Limit, I could totally see why Vertical chose to publish this series about high school girls reenacting Lord of the Flies, because the combination of social commentary and horror totally fits into Vertical’s tendency to go for artistic and edgy manga to add to their catalog. Mizuki Konno is a popular girl. Not the most popular girl in her class, but just popular enough to enjoy a social life in high school as one of the anointed ones. Mizuki is part of the inner circle headed up by Sakura, the most popular girl in school. Mizuki’s calculated goal is to just float along on the surface, never doing anything that might stand out and attract undesirable attention. Mizuki’s foil is one of the unpopular girls named Kamiya who seems to possess more than average intelligence and self-awareness for a high school girl. More importantly, Kamiya is actually willing to speak up against the injustices perpetuated by high school cliques. Mizuki’s orderly world abruptly changes when a bus crash during a class trip kills most of her classmates and strands her in the wilderness. Suddenly the scapegoat of the class, Morishige has the upper hand because she scavenged a scythe. She’s also become seriously unhinged, drawing pentagrams and consulting tarot cards to determine the likelihood of rescue. Kamiya goes along with Morishige but Mizuki seems unwilling or unable to adjust to her suddenly changed circumstances. Food is running out, and Morishige’s memory of past wrongs makes her all too willing to get back at her past tormentors.

Limit is like a refreshing sorbet of violence and societal critique for people who might be weary of too much romance in their shojo. Limit would also be an excellent crossover title for people who don’t tend to read much manga targeted at girls. Suenobu does a great job showing Mizuki’s inner life and contrasting her thoughts with the growing horror and tension of the hopeless situation she’s found herself in. The dynamics of high school friendships when they become stressed beyond endurance are explored, and so much drama was packed into this first volume that I’m very intrigued about what might happen next. This manga is published at the same size as Japanese manga and I must say it is awfully cute even though my inner cheapskate quails a bit at a $10.95 sticker price on a 4.5 by 7 inch volume. Character designs are a strength in this title, as it is very easy to distinguish between the cast members. Suenobu’s art is very clear and doesn’t suffer from being printed at a smaller size from what I’m used to seeing in North American manga editions.

Paradise Kiss Part 1 by Ai Yazawa

Paradise Kiss is a manga that is so good, I don’t mind buying it twice. While I’ve read the entire series and collected all but one volume of the Tokyopop edition, I was very excited to see that Vertical is releasing the series in an omnibus, large-size format. Paradise Kiss is the story of an ordinary girl named Yukari whose life revolves around school, cram school, and the occasional chance to muse upon her crush Tokumori. She doesn’t have much purpose in life, but her psyche is shaken up when she has a random encounter with a group of art-school students headed by the enigmatic George. He’s looking for a muse and model for his capstone collection from art school and while Yukari at first thinks that the punk Arashi, cross-dressing Isabella, perpetually cute Miwako, and maddeningly attractive George are all crazy, she begins to be drawn into their world due to their commitment and shared sense of purpose. Yukari has just been working to get into a good college because that’s what’s expected of her, but when she sees the group of teens her same age working with a true passion for fashion, she decides she will join them as a model.

Yukari quickly starts leading a double life, ditching cram school to learn how to sew beads on a dress. She develops a growing attraction to George, and it is fascinating to see her personality start to shift. She’s no longer able to maintain her cool exterior at school and Tokumori starts to notice her more as she displays occasional moments of goofiness. The art in Paradise Kiss is fabulous. The series originally ran in a fashion magazine and the characters all look like walking, talking fashion illustrations. Even better than the style displayed in the art is the way the fashion in the manga is so perfectly set up to showcase the differences in personality between the characters. I could easily look at outfits designed for Arashi, Isabella, and Miwako and know who was going to end up wearing them. George’s more malleable style signals his changing nature as he shifts from suits to glam cowboy to mod with almost too much ease. I enjoyed revisiting this series in this updated, more deluxe edition. Manga Bookshelf covered some of the differences in translation between the old and new editions. I’m going to buy this new edition from Vertical because I love this series, but I’m probably going to keep the old Tokyopop edition as well. I hope that this does well enough for Vertical that we could see some other work by Ai Yazawa translated, like Gokinjo Monogatari. In any case, Paradise Kiss is a series that I think deserves to be in print, and I am happy that Vertical is reissuing it.

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Manga Reviews

Pride Volumes 1 and 2 from Jmanga.com

Pride was a series I snapped up immediately when I saw it show up as a new shojo title on Jmanga.com. This manga details the story of two competing opera singers, one from an elite background and one trying to struggle her way up from poverty. In a twist from what one might expect, the rich girl is sympathetic if reserved while the poor girl exhibits lying psychopath tendencies. I do enjoy manga stories set with show business as a background, as they tend to be a great shoujo or josei variation on the type of striving and competition that I usually expect from sports manga. Pride would appeal to fans of dramatic, slightly retro shojo stories like the Glass Mask anime or my beloved ballet classic Swan.

The first two volumes of Pride are available at a bargain price as part of Jmanga’s Shojo from Shueisha sale.

The first volume is also available for free on Jmanga7.

Pride Volume 1 by Yukari Ichijo

Shio Asami is a poor little rich girl opera diva in training when she has an odd encounter with another high school girl, Moe Midorikawa who is working for a housecleaning service. Shio finds out that her father isn’t going to attend the opera with her so she gives her extra ticket to Moe. The girls go to the opera, where Shio is greeted warmly by opera society since she’s the daughter of a famous dead opera singer. Two people take notice of both Shio and Moe. Natsuko runs a club in the Ginza, and thinks that Shio looks just like her mother. Record company executive Mr. Jinno thinks that it has been a long time since he’s met “such an upstanding mademoiselle” when he looks at Shio, but gives Moe the advice that if she wants to get to the top it “doesn’t matter what shameless tricks you have to play.” Moe makes a bunch of comments about about Shio’s privileged lifestyle, but Shio is bored with it all saying, “I’m not the type to gloat over other people’s jealously. Rather I find it unpleasant.”

When Shio gets home she abruptly finds out that her life is going to change when her father confesses to her that his company is bankrupt and he’s about to move to New Zealand to work on a friend’s sheep farm. Rather than cause a scene, Moe looks shocked, thinks a bit, tosses back a glass of champagne, and asks about her father’s plans. This was the moment where I decided I was on Team Shio for the rest of the manga! Shio has a little bit of money in savings which will allow her to get a job in Japan, but she’s going to have to go to work instead of continuing her music studies in college. Moe and Shio then meet again when they are both entered in the same singing competition. Moe wins due to some careful costume selection, acting ability, and her making a horrible reference to the death of Shio’s mother right before Shio goes onstage to sing her final song. Then after the competition there’s a DIVAFIGHT!

Ichijo’s art is clear and easy to follow, with a bit of an old-fashioned style. I wasn’t surprised to see that she’s been working in manga since the 1970s, with Pride originally coming out in Japan in the early 2000s. Pride seems a bit more josei than shojo, with both the girls out of school and facing difficulties as they enter adult life. Shio’s pride prevents her from asking anyone for help as she settles in to an apartment on her own. She goes out of her way to maintain a happy facade for her father so he will continue with his own plans to move away. Shio finds some unexpected support from Ran, a composer in the piano division at her school whose mother Natsuko wants Shio to work in her club. Shio ends up stumbling into an unlikely friendship with Ran and is relieved at the idea that she might actually have a job singing, even if she has to learn a repertoire of non-opera songs.

Pride Volume 2 by Yukari Ichijo

The slightly slimy Jinno ends up influencing the lives of both Moe and Natsuko. Moe’s relentless drive to exploit her one contact in the music industry has her working as Jinno’s maid, and later prostrating herself and asking for his help after a confrontation with her deranged mother. Moe’s behavior is a contrast to Shio’s inability to ask anyone for a favor. Jinno provides Moe with advice and music lessons, and Moe is determined to learn how to act like a more mature woman in order to attract him. She also gets a job at Natsuko’s club after demonstrating her ability to charm elderly men. By the end of the second volume a long-term rivalry between Shio and Moe is established, as Moe’s untrained and more expressive voice attracts Ran’s interest as the vehicle to express his original compositions. Jinno wants Shio to be his perfect society companion since she has no difficulty moving in music industry circles. Moe and Shio both have what the other most desperately wants, and it will be interesting to see if Shio is able to toughen up and become more streetwise in order to deal with her unscrupulous rival. While I have a clear favorite character to follow in this series in Shio, Moe’s background is filled in a bit and it is clear that she acts desperate because she comes from desperate circumstances. It’ll be interesting to see how everything plays out in future volumes.

My one criticism of the series is that with such a clear focus on the lives of the heroines, a chance to drop in some extra knowledge of opera and music got passed up. While it is true that sometimes I put down a volume of Swan with a feeling that I’d just read an encyclopedia article about the development of Russian Ballet, I enjoyed getting some random factoids to balance out the angst. I would have liked Pride even more if there were a few more details about vocal training or more background information about opera. There was plenty of drama packed into the first two volumes, and I am definitely on board with this series. As long as there’s a DIVAFIGHT every couple of issues I suspect that I will continue to be very entertained.

Electronic access provided by the publisher.

Categories
Manga Reviews

Crazy for You Volumes 1 and 2 on JManga.com

Crazy for You Volumes 1 and 2 by Karuho Shiina

Available on Jmanga.com

I was very excited when I saw that JManga had started adding new shojo titles – two volumes at a time! Jmanga started up with plenty of shonen and seinen titles, but the josei and shojo categories were a bit underserved until recently. I was particularly interested in Crazy For You, since it is by the author of the quirky and heartwarming series Kimi Ni Todoke. With the contraction of the manga market and many publishers with significant shojo titles going out of business, there’s only so much capacity for print shojo, so I’m very happy to see JManga releasing more female-centric titles.

Crazy for You is an earlier series by Shiina, and while the art isn’t as sophisticated, Shiina puts together a very compelling plot with a bit of a twist from what the reader would expect from a shojo manga. In many ways Sachi is the stereotypical shojo heroine. She’s not the prettiest or smartest girl in school, and in fact she has never had a boyfriend. She does exhibit an almost ruthlessly optimistic way of viewing the world. Sachi’s good friend Akemi invites her along on a group date with a bunch of boys who go to her boyfriend’s school. Sachi meets Yuki, who pronounces her “cute” and since Sachi is easily impressed she thinks “I think I can survive for half a year on rice topped with just those words!” If Crazy For You was only an exploration of Sachi’s simple first romance, it would get boring very fast but fortunately Shiina starts mixing things up very quickly. It turns out that Yuki is an unapologetic womanizer, and Akemi warns her off of developing any sort of attachment to him. Yuki finds Sachi’s innocence amusing and refreshing, but decides that he would be a horrible person if he actually took advantage of her trust, so he decides not to date her. Despite all of these undercurrents, Sachi and Yuki end up developing an odd-not quite romantic friendship although Sachi is quite forthright about her feelings for Yuki. Akemi keeps trying to tell Sachi that Yuki is going to make her cry, and Yuki’s sardonic friend Akahoshi observes Yuki and Sachi’s budding relationship with his own hidden motivations. The first volume of the manga ends with a very surprising plot twist that is the type of development I would normally expect several volumes into the series. I was enjoying Sachi and Yuki’s odd friendship, but the conclusion really got me hooked on the series.

The art starts to smooth out a bit in the second volume, with some of the paneling in the later chapters reminding me more of the style shown in Kimi Ni Todoke. There’s plenty of dramatic fall-out to deal with, and Akahoshi warns Yuki that if he’s not going to date Sachi, he’s going to take her away. Sachi’s friendship with Akemi is strained, but she deals with it in a refreshingly direct manner. Akahoshi tells Sachi that it is impossible for men and women to be friends, and warns her away from her usual habit of trying to see the best in people.

Sachi’s portrayed as sweet and trusting, but she isn’t a Pollyanna caricature. She’s throwing herself into experiencing a new side of life and dealing with everything as best she can. One of the things I liked about Crazy for You is that I wasn’t really sure which direction the plot was going to go. Sachi has the potential for a romantic relationship with Yuki if a variety of obstacles – both external and internal are solved. On the other hand, Akahoshi’s somewhat harsh exterior and blunt way of speaking may be a front for someone who is genuinely caring, and his tendency to not try to shield Sachi from harsh reality might make him a better match for her in the long run. I hope that we see more shojo titles like Crazy for You on Jmanga.

Electronic access provided by the publisher.

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Manga News

Great Deal for Shueisha titles from Jmanga

Jmanga is featuring shojo titles from Shueisha, with great deals when you buy both volumes.

Or, you can sample the titles Crazy for You and Pride over on Jmanga7, Jmanga’s new free site.

Crazy for You is by the author of Kimi Ni Todoke, which is published by Viz. Here’s the series info from Jmanga:

Brought up in an all-girls high school, Sachi is a natural airhead who has been single for her whole life. During her first match-making party, she meets a boy called Yuki-chan, and suddenly her history of being boyfriendless has come to an end…?!

And Pride sounds like soapy fun:

Shio Asami, the wealthy daughter of a famous, deceased opera singer, aims to follow the same path as her mother. Moe Midorikawa, a young woman working several part-time jobs, dreams of becoming an opera singer as well. What will happen when these two meet?! Volume one is full of drama, love and rivalry!

Both of these series rocked up my to-read list and I hope to read and review them very soon!

Categories
Manga Reviews

Alice in the Country of Clover: Cheshire Cat Waltz

Alice in the Country of Clover: Cheshire Cat Waltz Volume 1 by QuinRose and Mamenosuke Fujimaru

I’m always a little hesitant to review manga from genres I don’t generally enjoy. After all, if I was reading a western and my reaction was “I don’t like books with horses and cowboys!” that’s not very helpful to potential readers. Part of the reason why I liked Alice in the Country of Hearts so much was that it seemed to transcend the whole manga adaptation of a dating game genre a little bit, just because it was occasionally surreal and weird. Alice in the Country of Hearts certainly succeeded in at least being a manga with an interesting atmosphere, even if the plot wasn’t the strongest point of the manga. I think that hard core fans of the first series will certainly enjoy Cheshire Cat Waltz, but I didn’t like it very much just because it exhibited a certain lack of subtly and less intriguing storyline.

One of the interesting things about Alice in the Country of Hearts was the worldbuilding as Alice discovers the strange new world (populated by handsome men) that she’s been transported to. Alice in the Country of Clover starts midway in a different reality where Alice’s home base was the amusement park instead of the clock tower. The world suddenly gets transported from Hearts to the Country of Clover, and Alice has to adjust to a new reality while fighting her attraction to Boris, the Cheshire Cat. Starting midstream can be both good and bad. Readers already familiar with the setting of this magna aren’t bogged down by exposition. On the other hand, any references to the pasts of the characters feels a bit unearned, because the reader hasn’t seen the history that’s being referred to. Alice keeps mentioning how much she misses her old life at the amusement park after she’s whisked away to the Country of Clover, but since her time at the amusement park was never fully portrayed, her dilema doesn’t have much emotional depth.

Fujimaru ably executes all the varied character designs established in the earlier series, but I tend to prefer the delicate illustrations that were a bit more sparse on screen tone in Hearts. There isn’t really anything to complain about with Clover’s art, but it just seems less visually distinct than the look that Soumei Hoshino established in Hearts. Clover’s art was more typical and the actions of the characters were also much less subtle. Blood skulks around trying out bad innuendo on Alice in all of his dialogue, and Alice gets randomly groped on a number of occasions. This stands in contract to the surreal violence and suggestions of psychological trauma that were hinted at in the earlier series. So overall, my reaction to Alice in the Country of Clover was that it was too much like a dating sim manga for me to really enjoy, and I’m going to have to assume that Alice in the Country of Hearts was the notable exception in this series in terms of being more rewarding to read. That being said, I’m probably not completely done with this franchise – I would certainly pick up another volume if Hoshino is on art duties again, and I’d also be curious to read a manga in the series that features Ace, the directionally impaired and homicidal Knight.