Manga Review: Doubt!! by Kaneyoshi Izumi

Doubt!!, Vol. 1Doubt!!, Vol. 1

by Kaneyoshi Izumi

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Ai Maekawa is tired of being plain and unpopular, and spends the entire summer between Jr. & Sr. high improving her outer appearance. At a new school, and with a completely new look she is instantly beautiful and popular and best friends with the two best boys in school. Although, as a former “jimi” she is still learning the “ropes” of what it means to be popular – resulting in a number of misguided incidents.

This isn’t my favourite series as it progresses, but I love how Kaneyoshi has written a complicated female lead having both the plain and the popular in her. She becomes an intense and unstable personality which I find both charming and entertaining.

Manga Review: From Far Away / by Kyoko Hikawa

From Far Away, Vol. 01From Far Away, Vol. 01

by Kyoko Hikawa

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

18 year Japanese student Noriko Takichi is transported to an alternate reality where she appears as “the awakening” the force that will awaken the destructive “sky demon”. Seers of the world are aware of her presence, and she must hide it in order to protect herself. Everyone is looking for her as the person who controls the “Sky demon” will control the world.

I give this series a high rating of 4 out of 5 stars. There are some serious flaws with the story and more particularly with the translation but it is still highly entertaining.

This is a typical Japanese girl transported to another world for some sacrificial/spiritual purpose where she is protected and loved by a powerful character (Izark) who usually is the key to the action; think “Vision of Escaflowne”, “Fushigi Yugi”, or “Red River”. Noriko fits the typical heroine profile of these series, a typical high school girl who tries her best, wanting to help, and finding the small things that she can do.

The most unique difference from other series of the genre is that Noriko can’t speak the language of this new world. In any other series I’ve read, the different language is explained away by “eating the food”, “kissing the guy”, or “obtaining a magical item”… or it isn’t explained at all. In this series however, she is unable to communicate — it is the first thing she can do to improve her situation — learn the language. I’m particularly impressed with Hikawa’s speech bubbles which help the reader to distinguish what language is being spoken when.

The translation of this episode, and the series in general is a bit of a miss for me. It is an older series (which often explains poor translation planning). It has the feeling that whoever translated was more interested in getting a “direct” or accurate translation, rather than creating an adaptation that would be more fluid and understandable in English.

For example, when they (Noriko and Izark) come across the travelling merchant who was attacked by bandits, he is laying in the grass calling out “here, here”… 2 pages later when Izark hands him a bottle of water, the merchant says “koko” and Noriko says to herself, “oh, koko means water”. If you didn’t have some Japanese background, you might not get the connection between these two situations. Koko means Here. So, he wasn’t saying “here, here” he was saying “water, water”. It’s situations like these that take away from the flow of the story. And, if I hadn’t reread this series in succession I might have missed it.

And don’t get me started when Noriko uses the words “Hella fast” and “Hecka cool”. They are so out of place in this comic, it’s not even funny…

Manga Review: Over the Rainbow by Keiko Honda

Over the RainbowOver the Rainbow

by Keiko Honda

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

The story is nice, and definitely keeps the pace of a Honda Keiko manga. The art is airy & beautiful. I believe my only concern is the translation.

There are some understandable translation hiccups. Also, the moment that the protagonist remembers who she is there is a confusing change of pace as though several chapters were cut from the story.

But still, not that bad considering it is a one-shot (which doesn’t normally allow for much explanation). And it is an early translation at the beginning of the boom of manga popularity in the West (which are frequently found riddled with translation issues).

Quick Thoughts On: Alice 19th by Yuu Watase

Alice 19th, Vol. 1 (Alice 19th, #1)Alice 19th, Vol. 1

by Yuu Watase

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Alice 19th, is Yuu Watase’s answer to 9/11. It’s about using your words carefully for the result of peace. It’s the perfect-little fantasy series; a combination of the best bits from “Magic Knight Rayearth”, “Fushigi Yuugi”, “Sailor Moon Super S” plus, a few elements of Lewis Carroll’s “Alice in Wonderland”.

Quick Review: Beauty Pop by Kiyoko Arai

Beauty Pop, Vol. 1 (Beauty Pop, #1)Beauty Pop, Vol. 1

by Kiyoko Arai

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This is about a girl named Kiri, a skilled yet passive hairstylist who performs her magic on those who need it to bolster their feelings. She attends a high school with a group of boys, the sons of huge beauty product companies, who plan to take Japan by storm (after they graduate) as a huge beauty conglomerate. Until then, the boys have formed a “scissors project” club. Essentially they are a flashy all-beauty club which does make-overs on selected girls.

While Kiri is not ambitious, and tends to hide her personality and her skills, the boys are obnoxious and ambitious and she quickly gets pulled into competition with them, and later directly into their club. Though rather reluctantly.

It’s a romantic shoujo comedy which follows some of the usual pattern of reverse-harem manga (1 girl, lots of boys). I guess the easiest reference for most would to think of “Ouran High School Host Club”.

The heroine is confident/passive/kuudere. CHECK
The side characters types usually include:
1. The cool/megane. CHECK.
2. The happy/kawaii. CHECK.
3. The stoic/cool. CHECK.
4.The neurotic/okama. CHECK.
5. The sporty(competitive)/tsundere. CHECK.
ll questionable to me whether Kiri has stronger feelings towards Narumi than she does for her other friends.

The passive character of the heroine is a recurring theme in reverse-harem manga. And she is often paired with either the neurotic/cross-dressing character or the competitive/tsundere personality. Both of whose personalities are built out of a fear of getting close. They can stay close to the character that they love, but they’ve built a wall which makes it difficult for the two to get together.

In this story, Kiri is paired with Narumi who is the “hairstylist” in the scissors club. His personality: Tsundere. He can’t help but call her names, pick on here, and be competitive. But, in the end he cares for her. Unfortunately their relationship is rather strained throughout and there is little development in showing Kiri as more active, or Narumi as less abrasive. They end up together (it’s not a spoiler if it’s totally obvious, right?) but it’s dissatisfying.

I probably rate the story 3 out of 5. At 10 volumes it gets a bit labored. There are some interesting stories, and arcs. But, generally when the main character goes through little development the story gets tiring. I often stop reading at about book 3, and get back to the story around book 7. I don’t always want to read a story full through if the middle doesn’t lend itself to the development of plot or character.

The art style is both light, and solid. There is a clear style by this artist, but the story doesn’t get weighed down by the art. And the story is cute, if a bit predictable. I still think it’s a series worth reading, but I would say borrow it from your library before you decide to buy.

Manga Review: The Palette of 12 Secret Colors by Nari Kusakawa

The Palette of 12 Secret Colors, Volume 1 (Palette of 12 Secret Colors, #1)The Palette of 12 Secret Colors, Volume 1

by Nari Kusakawa

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is a shoujo (for girls) story about Cello who lives on the tropical Island of Opal. Opal is known for its palettes, or people who have the magical ability to extract colour from objects and use the colour to paint other objects: like brocade, and precious jewels. Each palette is paired with a bird which are seen as the treasures of the Island. Cello, by sheer luck, has been given a chance to become a palette and is currently enrolled in the training school. She has been paired with the bird “Yoyo” [Do you get the joke? Cello, and Yoyo!] , but is unfortunately a bit of a screw-up and can’t seem to master the 12 secret colours. She is a frequent visitor and “friend” of the school doctor “Dr. Guell” who can remove any spilled colour from his students.

The art is typical of Nari Kusakawa work, somewhat simple with rigid pen/ink drawn lines and obnoxiously large eyes. Her art is easily distinguishable among the noise of shoujo manga. She’s refreshingly unique.

This story too, is very much something she would write. A slightly fantastic story with magical elements in a world that is easy to imagine, but hard to believe in. They always feel a bit like folk or fairy tales. The romance element, and character development take a back-seat to the fun and adventurous stories.

I’m usually a big advocate for heavy character-development stories. But in Kusakawa’s worlds her characters are already finished “baking”; they’re fully formed. They know who they are, they just need to play out the situations they are given as best as they can.

The characterization of the birds adds element that would have otherwise been lacking from a strictly plot-based story such as this. Dr. Guell’s bird Olga acts like a hauty girlfriend, and Cello’s bird Yoyo acts like her father. It adds that bit of needed warmth and humour.

Of the handful of Kusakawa’s stories I’ve read, I like this one the best. I think this is mainly due to the fact that the main character falls in love with a “somewhat” adult. Sometimes as an adult I get tired of emotionally angsty romance between pre-teens. This is a relatively angst free adventure about a girl who is a free spirited screw up — but she tries her best… and is rewarded with a happy life.

All-in-all a delightful and refreshing story that is worth reading…and then reading over again.

Manga Review: Girl Got Game by Shizuru Seino

Girl Got Game, Vol. 10Girl Got Game, Vol. 10

by Shizuru Seino

My rating: 2 of 5 stars

This is a fun romantic comedy series in the same vein as Hana Kimi, (seriously if you liked this one, go read Hana Kimi. I think it’s far superior to this one). It’s a fun and short series. It seems like 10 volumes might be a lot, but if you ignore all of the omake at the end of each volume, you could probably condense the series to about 6 full volumes.

Generally I like this series. And because it is a quick read, I pick it up often. There are a few things that bug me about it. First, the title. Sometimes I have to question the judgment of English translation when they completely ruin a name like this. The original name is in English, and significantly less corny than “Girl Got Game”. Who made this decision? You should be ashamed of yourself!

Second, I hate the ending. The series goes from a fun romantic sports-comedy to weird fantasy-comedy (think One Piece) in the last chapter. It’s irritating because it completely changes the flow of the story and takes away that feeling of closure that would have come had they just ended it after Aizawa’s big basketball battle with her teammates. There was no reason to add-in characters which had not made an appearance before… and to turn them into super-hero basketball characters. It was weird. And annoying.

I always save all of the omake (after stories), which I always enjoy, to read after I’ve read through the main story. It helps takes away some of the sting that I get from this final volume. That being said, I still will read this series a dozen times more. It really is cute, and a lot of fun!

Quick Review: Club 9 by Makoto Kobayashi

Club 9, Vol. 1Club 9, Vol. 1

by Makoto Kobayashi

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

You really can’t be in a bad mood after reading this series. Haruo Hattori is totally loveable as the cheerful, clumsy, naive “country” girl. The translators really had their hands full with this work — and did an amazing and believable job with her character. Love it! I just wish there was more in English. And seriously, has anyone actually been able to track down volume 4?

Manga Review: Zig*Zag by Yuki Nakaji

Zig*Zag, Volume 1 (English)Zig*Zag, Volume 1

by Yuki Nakaji

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I’ve also read the few volumes of Venus in Love which were published in English and must admit that this one is the stronger of the two stories. There’s something about Nakaji’s style (or is it the translator’s style) that I really like — unfortunately this is another series that was left unfinished thanks to a weak North American manga market.

Manga Review: Old Boy by Garon Tsuchiya

Old Boy, Vol. 8Old Boy, Vol. 8

by Garon Tsuchiya

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Great finish. I know some people found it weak. But, it was just what I’d expect from a master of the Japanese psychological thriller. So good. So frustrating. And sometimes totally irritating. And so hard to put out of my mind after reading it. It’s been sitting on my bookshelves for a couple years now, I don’t know why it took me so long to actually read it. Definitely my best “new” read for the year so far!