Read a bunch more new manga + some new novels, too!
Naoki Urasawa's
Monster vol.'s 1-18 (complete): Wow... what can I say? This is widely considered to be a masterpiece, and I absolutely agree.
...Now, just as a content warning, I will note that there is a fair share of (detailed upper female) nudity and... well,
unsavory situations, but it's not fanservice-- it's dark and gritty instead. Still, it's there.
That element aside, though, this series is amazing in every other way. The awesome historical-fiction aspects; the deep moral tension and commentary; the way every little thing ends up being connected; the way Tenma betters people just by coming into contact with them-- even when he doesn't realize it <3 ; the thriller elements (the antagonist is genuinely frightening); and the fantastic characterization (which is so good that several secondary and even very minor characters' deaths are amazingly heartbreaking {I was tearing up something fierce for both
SPOILER: Highlight text to read: Martin and Grimmer, and
SPOILER: Highlight text to read: Martin is only around for a chapter or two!
). And then that ending almost warrants a post in and of itself-- there's quite a lot going on thematically with the whole last sequence, and all of it is great. (Also: Holy crap, that scene when
SPOILER: Highlight text to read: Johan suddenly {appears to?} sit up in bed was downright terrifying.
I've experienced many jump-scares in videogames/movies/TV/anime/etc., but I'd never come across one in a
*book* {manga or otherwise} before.
And while I didn't actually physically jump at it, I sure came really darn close {in fact, I think my heart just might have}...
Wow.) I mean, while I usually prefer endings to be a tad more conclusive/wrapped up than this was, and I'm still not quite sure whether that bit with
SPOILER: Highlight text to read: Johan in the hospital is supposed to be taken literally or figuratively/metaphorically, I really can't think of any other way it *could* end and still be as amazing. So, yeah, I approve.
To sum it up, I personally rate this a 10, and if the red-light-district stuff wasn't a part of it I'd recommend it to everyone.
Orange Marmalade manhwa chapters 1-119 (complete): ...Well, while this certainly wasn't like high art or anything, LOL (not by a long shot)
, I was actually pleasantly surprised by it, given its synopsis and genre(s). It is not a typical 'vampire romance' at all, and that's a good thing-- it deals more with the characters as people while combined with the heavy social issues surrounding the two groups (racism, ostracization, and violent discrimination); and the romance itself is... actually pretty 'normal,' as romantic dramas go. (...Well, I mean, as normal as it can be between a rather traumatized/tactless guy and a similarly traumatized girl who has to actively suppress her desire to drain him whenever he's around.
) Basically, she just confuses the heck out of him, he teases her back, and it just ends up being funny.
(It's also nice that they're into playing/singing music.
) That said, of course, there were still more than a few romance/drama clichés and such with the hatred and the identity reveals and the 'rivals' and etc.
; however, the female MC actually handles most of it pretty well, aside from the (rather brief)
SPOILER: Highlight text to read: blackmailing bit (and her quite understandable reluctance to reveal her identity, given all of the negative factors surrounding it, even from her own love interest
). Actually, the only thing that ended up being rather irritating was the male MC's attitude after he finds out who the female MC is; because while it's partially understandable once his history is revealed, it's also... well, just really bad.
That said, he does kinda redeem himself a bit later on once he has a talk with his mom + gets Mari's letter + works through things on his own + finally has a really in-depth talk with
SPOILER: Highlight text to read: his step-dad, and I was actually rather impressed with how he responded to the merciless bullying by almost all of the others once they also finally find out (I mean, I was expecting him to say/do *something* to support her then, but I was totally *not* expecting him to actually
SPOILER: Highlight text to read: drink that blood himself, pig's blood or not ), etc.-- so I guess he can be forgiven.
Finally, the very end felt a bit rushed-- and too... easy, almost?-- however, it was 'nice' enough, so whatever. *shrug* In all, I guess it was a decent enough one-time read.
Osamu Tezuka's
Phoenix vol.'s 1-2 (DROPPED): So... is there something I'm missing here? I know Tezuka is an absolute legend, obviously, and I'd also heard that
Phoenix was his 'masterwork.' But I couldn't even get through it (not even *close,* in fact).
I mean, yes, the overall concept and the back-and-forth chronological plotting and even some of the panel layout stuff was pretty awesome in
theory, but in
practice...
Firstly, I didn't like volume #1 at all.
Between its at-times extra-cartoonish silliness + anachronistic/fourth-wall-breaking stuff (which all took me right out of what I thought was supposed to be a serious story), the uncaring/depressing brutality of many of the parts that *weren't* anachronistic/fourth-wall-breaking/silly, the more-than-slightly-offensive fact that the only apparent uses for the few female characters were for them to be either evil/crazy idiots or literal baby machines (?!), and then to top it all off the fact that the only character who was at all sympathetic met a *completely*
unsatisfying end, you can imagine how underwhelmed, unimpressed, and disappointed I was with the introduction to this supposed 'masterpiece.'
Wanting to give it more of a chance, however, I went ahead and moved on to volume #2. And, at first, it seemed that the series had taken a vastly-improved turn. In comparison to the first volume, vol. 2 was at first quite engaging. As most of you probably know, sci-fi is very near and dear to my heart, having grown up on it; so the setting caught my interest immediately. And I thought that the characters were better, too. ...However, then the phoenix had to go and say that it/Earth was basically 'god'
, while another character derided the Bible
... and *then* there was that entire end section, in which a huge amount of page-time is given to that whole misanthropic evolution sequence.
So, yeah, thanks to all of *that,* I ended up disliking volume #2, as well.
At this point, I tried to give the series one final chance by just skimming through all of the rest of the volumes, but nothing changed my mind. (And, of course, since the series was never finished, the big, connecting climax that *might* have redeemed it doesn't exist.) So, sorry, I tried, but I had to drop this.
Saturn Apartments, a.k.a.
Dosei Mansion, vol.'s 1-7 (complete): Wow... what a beautiful series. The stylized character designs might take a little getting used to, but the sense of scale and space and the landscapes are downright *amazing.* The characterization is great, too, and there's just something so wonderfully atmospheric about this (and no, that's not a pun, intentional or otherwise, LOL!
); plus, it also has a good ending. 10/10 and heartily recommended. <3
Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou chapters 1-142 (complete {including 'chapter 0' and the special epilogue}): Hmm... well, getting most of the negatives out of the way first, unfortunately there's rather more (detailed upper female) nudity in this than was really necessary (there's one character-- not human, since she doesn't age {although not necessarily a robot, either?}-- who lives in the wild and doesn't wear a stitch), and several ('female') robots' data transfer ability just so happens to involve tongues...
Otherwise, it's pretty calm and pleasant and occasionally even wonder-filled, and everything is beautifully framed and drawn; it's also nice how certain events and people end up connected later on, even though this is mostly a slice-of-life; and there's a gentle melancholy underneath it all (because it's post-apocalyptic, for one, and for another the MC is an ageless robot who knows that everyone she cares about will eventually be gone). That said, though, as it nears the end, the spans of time going on between each chapter get longer and longer, and it eventually just sort-of... floats to a stop-- with no closure on the Alpha robot flying on that high ship, or on what those gel-like 'mushroom' things with brain waves are, or really anything else. I mean, I know that wasn't really the point, but I'm not sure I liked that those things were never given any sort of explanation or end.
Overall, I suppose it was worth the read once, though.
The
Rokka no Yuusha, a.k.a.
Rokka: Braves Of The Six Flowers, novels 1-4 (so far): I had said that I'd dive into these the instant the anime (which was an extremely {read: awesomely!
} faithful adaptation of the first volume, BTW!
) was over because I had fallen in love with the series so much, and that's precisely what I did. And guess what? The novels are not only every bit as awesome, they're even *more* so, because as fantastic as the anime/first book truly was, it's still merely the setup to a much larger tale, and that larger tale is even more awesome than expected!!
To start with, that anime/first book finale twist does *not* turn out how you think it might *at all*
(and that is a very good thing!
)-- the story actually takes a turn in a very different (and even better!!) direction; and it also rather fascinatingly delves into certain characters' inside information, backgrounds, and relationships (and, consequently, a nice bit of world-building about a few other things, such as
SPOILER: Highlight text to read: the Saints, the Kyouma, and even a few details about the fake crest; etc.)-- and, to top it all off, it also greatly improves several characters'... well, characterization
, plus perfectly clears up the issues I originally had with another character's behavior in the first arc (it makes complete sense now, and is pretty darn ingenious, to boot!). There is also just a heck of a lot more going on than first appears-- the plots in play by the enemies are very long-game, quite complex, and take some turns that you won't be expecting, and the main baddie is fascinating. (Oh yeah, and there's more fighting, too
, as well as progress with the actual overall quest.) Book #4 in particular contains several major twists, one of which in particular is *massive* (and it actually makes perfect sense, too, given the previously-explained mechanics of
SPOILER: Highlight text to read: the Saints' acquisition of powers). (BTW, that is one of my favorite things about this guy's writing-- sometimes people's 'foreshadowing' can be so heavy-handed/obvious as to not even *be* foreshadowing, LOL
; *however,* in contrast, *this* writer's foreshadowing is brilliantly,
perfectly subtle.
I *love* how he sets up little details well, well in advance which are so well embedded/woven into the world/setting/characters/narrative/etc. that you only realize their significance later on. It's awesome.) To sum it up, this series is 10/10 amazing and I cannot wait for more!
And the
Utsuro no Hako to Zero no Maria, a.k.a.
The Empty Box And The Zeroth Maria /
HakoMari, novels 1-7 (complete): I had put this series in my plan-to-read list a while back because it was very highly-rated on MAL and the description/reviews/etc. I'd seen for it were quite intriguing. However, since there was only one more novel left to be written at the time I had added it, I decided to wait until the finale was released and translated so I could just read them all in one shot. And I'm glad I did, since literally everything from the end of book #2 straight through to the end of the series is one single narrative.
As for the series itself: At first, some of the devices used seem a tad typical (for example, while the MC and the titular Maria are basically destined to be a couple and he even directly chooses her over everyone else, there's still a bit of a harem element; there's a bit of {described} fanservice; etc.), but then it gets real unique real fast-- and, eventually, gets far darker and goes far deeper than I ever expected.
(As the layers of the main characters are peeled back throughout the series, it's revealed that they're all actually pretty darn scarred and messed up mentally/emotionally/psychologically; and it really delves into their various disorders and traumas in a way I was not expecting.) Even just the first book pulls the rug out from under your assumptions quite neatly...
multiple times. And while at first I thought book 2 wasn't quite as good as book 1, the entire endgame was actually very good, and had a
*kicker* of a twist in the book's very final line that was just plain fantastic (and, of course, gives you an absolute *need* to read the third installment).
That third installment is even better, because while at first it (purposefully) doesn't seem to hold as much danger as the scenario might suggest, because given some of the previous book's scenarios/info you just naturally assume that
SPOILER: Highlight text to read: even if it does come to the point of death, it likely won't have any lasting effect on them in the 'real world,' however it is in fact then revealed to be just the opposite-- which means that the consequences/stakes skyrocket instantly.
...And then the twists *really* start.
And while, by the time that book ended and you realized
SPOILER: Highlight text to read: that there's still one more round to go, I wasn't sure if I liked that (because of the
SPOILER: Highlight text to read: killing and the personality twisting and all ), it actually ends up being some magnificent setup for that next book (which shows an excellent new side of the protagonist plus clears up my original dislike of certain {apparent} characterizations
SPOILER: Highlight text to read: of the secondary MC Daiya {...although, then again, what he does [with the protagonist's eventual tacit consent] at the end is certainly a [pretty tragic] game-changer... }, and was pretty fantastic overall).
The fifth book then finally delves into Daiya's psyche for real
SPOILER: Highlight text to read: along with his past with Kokone and that other girl mentioned in the previous book, and provides two of the most fantastic twists in the entire series. And then the sixth and seventh books go into that surprisingly even darker and deeper place (...holy crap, the goes-around-comes-around nature of the final volume was ingenious, even if the descent into complete and utter madness was both horrifying and terrifying...
). I couldn't believe that there could be a happy ending after all of that for certain characters, but-- while not 'perfect,' obviously, since there were still some serious, lasting consequences-- miraculously, it actually did end relatively well for them (and I am not ashamed to admit that I was tearing up throughout the entirety of the epilogue
, in a good way). So, yeah, this was a rather emotionally taxing series, but-- if you don't mind the described violence/psychologically-messed-up stuff
-- well worth the read.