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Review Archive

To see a list of reviews in alphabetical order, please see our review index.


Review: Bleach (Vol. 27)

Reviewer: Lissa Pattillo


Manga-ka: Kubo Tite
Publisher: Viz
Rating: Teen (13+)
Release Date: June 2009

Synopsis: “Orihime’s return from the Soul Society is interrupted by the Arrancar Ulquiorra, who has a different, terrifying path for her. Using duplicitous tactics, Ulquiorra convinces Orihime to accompany him to Hueco Mundo, which brands her as a traitor in the Soul Society’s eyes and therefore unworthy of rescue. Ichigo refuses to abandon his friend, and sets out to storm Hueco Mundo to set her free! But can he win when the entire world is against him?!”

Swords were clashing and powers soaring here in the twenty-seventh volume of Bleach, but as has been consistent in the recent story arc, it’s the character development that really makes the book a rewarding read.

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Review: Tsubasa Reservoir Chronicle (Vol. 21)


Manga-ka: CLAMP
Publisher: DelRey
Rating: Teen (13+)
Release Date: May 2009

Synopsis: “Fai’s secret past is revealed in horrific detail, and all his lies laid bare. Now Fai must face the rage of Kurogane, and the one person who showed Fai kindness as a child is now his mortal enemy. Can Fai survive Kurogane, Ashura-ô, and Fei-Wang Reed’s final curse?”

This entire volume consists of two things: Fai flashbacks, which serve to finally fully flesh out the smiling sorcerer’s tortured past, and then overlapping present-time fight sequences. Thanks to the number of speedline intense, dialogue-scarce action panels, don’t be surprised if you fly through this volume quicker than most. Ultimately, however, all this speed does is induce longing for the next volume to happen sooner than later.

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Review: Flower of Life (Vol. 04)

Reviewer: Lissa Pattillo


Manga-ka: Fumi Yoshinaga
Publisher: DMP
Rating: Older Teen (16+)
Release Date: June 2009

Synopsis: “As the school year winds down, Harutaro is in good spirits. His illness feels like a thing of the past, he and his best friend Shota are developing aspirations toward becoming professional manga artists, and best of all – his mom has come home for a visit! Just when things seem at their best, life often finds a way of balancing the scales. When a family secret causes Harutaro to question his future, who will he turn to in his lowest moment? Could it be… the one person you’d least expect?!”

By the time the end rolls around, the series takes its decidedly most bittersweet turn. Not to scare any reader into believing horrible things are going to happen, but it’s more about the overall mood. Flower of Life stays true to its slice-of-life genre, which in truest form means the good, and the bad, of everyday life.

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Review: Apollo’s Song

Reviewer: Lissa Pattillo


Manga-ka: Osamu Tezuka
Publisher: Vertical
Rating: Mature (18+)
Release Date: June 2007

Synopsis: “Apollo’s Song follows the tragic journey of Shogo, a young man whose abusive childhood has instilled in him a loathing for love so profound he finds himself compelled to acts of violence when he is witness to any act of intimacy or affection whether by human or beast. His hate is such that the gods intervene, cursing Shogo to experience love throughout the ages ultimately to have it ripped from his heart every time. From the Nazi atrocities of World War II to a dystopian future of human cloning, Shogo loses his heart, in so doing, healing the psychic scars of his childhood hatred.”

I had mixed feelings about this book. At the very least I can say it’s the weakest of Osamu Tezuka’s works that I’ve had the chance to read released in English, but then again Osamu was a creator of so much obvious literary abilities, that isn’t saying too much, and from someone who has only recently began really delving into his legacy, it perhaps says even less.

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Review: The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya (Vol. 03)


Author: Nagaru Tanigawa/Noizi Ito
Manga-ka: Gaku Tsugano
Publisher: Yen Press
Rating: Older Teen (16+)
Release Date: June 2009

Synopsis: “The SOS Brigade gets browbeaten into entering a baseball tournament to help their fearless leader stave off boredom. But Haruhi has no intention of losing… and she’s ready to pitch a fit if her team doesn’t step up to the plate!”

While I still don’t get the huge hullabaloo about Haruhi the character as her own franchise, the appeal of the series is becoming evident as the strange oddities befalling Kyon’s life remain constant staples. He accepts everything with a grain of salt, as he knows there’s little he can do to fight the tide against psychics, aliens and robots out on a mission to save the world. And why would he want to?

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Mini Review: Monkey High (Vol. 01)


Monkey High! (Vol. 01) – Shouko Akira
Published by Viz (March 2008)

If there’s a contest for cutest shoujo couple, give the two leads in Monkey High! the grand prize. Haruna Aizawa transfers to a new school after her Father falls out of diplomatic favour with her old private school. Bored with the social ladders of school, and expecting nothing different at her new one, she’s surprised to be greeted with the smiling face of Macharu Yamashita.

Macharu Yamashita is the school’s ‘baby monkey’, short and sweet with a positive sense of sincerity and a joy for life. It also makes him a fairly unlikely candidate for romantic endeavours with the beautiful and cool new transfer student, but it doesn’t take long for sparks to fly between them. An evolving romance is built up throughout the story, from awkward sidelong glances to dealing with fellow classmates eager for the final word on their blossoming relationship.

Haruna Aizawa as lead is calm and collected, a down to earth and, in my opinion, pretty cool character. Her apprehensions, fears and demeanour make her feel very true to life and the believability of her character will not be lost on readers. In contrast, there’s Macharu, which isn’t to say he doesn’t feel true to life himself, but in a different way than Haruna. Macharu is positively adorable, but not in a manner that pulls him from his role as high school student (sorry guys, this kind of cute isn’t usually your forte). He’s kind and chipper but with his own serious side that comes out at all the believable moments. His smile easily lights up the page and it becomes no wonder why Haruna can’t help but feel elated.

With an art style that compliments the story to near shoujo-specific perfection, and a couple that easily rules as one of the most endearing I’ve read in a long while, volume one of Monkey High! impressed me with all its charms and I can’t wait to read volume two.

Review written May 31, 2009 by Lissa Pattillo
Book borrwed from Halifax Regional Public Libraries


Mini Review: Pluto (Vol. 03)


Pluto (Vol. 03) – Naoki Urusawa & Osamu Tezuka
Published by Viz

A good portion of this volume follows Atom’s sister, Uran. She’s another one of the planet’s most advanced robots (though not one of the targeted seven) and has sensors so delicate that she possesses a strong sense of empathy for others, even able to sense a person or animal’s feelings from far away. I really love Uran as a character, with her combination of robotic logistics and childlike reaction. There was a well-blended mix of confidence versus curiousity that allowed her to feel very endearing as she helps the robot she meets lost in a park, and even in the bored manner she deals with investigators at the books beginning.

The robot Uran helps, on the other hand, proves a little less involved on the personality-scale but has some robotically unique powers that both invoked some thought and gave Naoki Urusawa the chance to add in a beautifully timed piece of coloured artwork mid-story. Viz has my thanks for maintaining the full-colours because much of the story’s impact at the moment would’ve been lost without it.

With much attention on Uran, and her subsequent involvement with a strange homeless robot she befriends, the tone of some parts of the third volume of Pluto have a less sinister, though still poignantly relevant, feel than many previous scenes. In this third volume, the action sequences and suspenseful dramatics, which lent such occasional high-octave reading in previous books, are less prevalent but no less foreshadowed either. Pluto continues to deliver all the intrigue and surprises that made the two first two books so compelling, from uprisings of anti-Robot cults (which evokes even more sympathy to the plights robots face) to the appearance of another of the mystery killer’s targets. The ‘mystery killer’ is also more fleshed out, so to speak, though there remains much to be explained.

In love for this series, I’ve also recently started re-watching old episodes of Astro Boy, and may I note, being amazed at the sheer nostalgic value and realizing that the Uran I like here in Pluto is the same ‘little girl’ I always idolized as a child. Some things never change! And impressively the same can be said for Naoki Urusawa’s Pluto, which is more and more evidently a brilliantly fleshed out version of Osamu Tezuka’s original story arc. I can’t wait to see how he takes the story from here on and continue to highly recommend it.

Review written May 30, 2009 by Lissa Pattillo
Book purchased in-store from Chapters


Mini Review: The Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Service (Vol. 09)


The Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Service (Vol. 09) 
Eiji Otsuka (Story) & Housui Yamazaki (Art)
Published by Dark Horse (May 2009)

My favourite part of this volume would be its last chapter, which gives focus to Yuji Yata and his alien hand puppet, and the group’s embalmer, Keiko Makino. Though the two are there for nearly all the cases, they tend to get the short end of the attention stick. Yata in particular is often shadowed over because having the power of an obnoxious hand puppet is rarely as useful as it sounds. Yet in this chapter we not only learn a great deal more about these two, er, three characters, but we also see Yata and his partner exhibit a skill of power that’s quite impressive indeed, and sort of a shame we haven’t seen more of it until now. A little surprise fluff topped it off at the end for a sweet endnote, a contrast to some of the darker flashbacks in the chapter itself. Although, is it just me, or is Keiko teenage girl mannerisms of speech much more pronounced in this book?

Other episodic events in this volume involve a girl hounded from beyond the grave by dolls, a bodiless peeping tom in a woman’s changing locker, and my favourite of the corpse-involved, a story about a group of boys with special powers to hear things from another world. There wasn’t much in the way of connecting plot devices as previous volumes have been including but the character-driven strength of the cast of Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Service still keeps each chapter interesting. The nurse who shares powers similar to Karatsu does return though, as I’d hoped she would, and as much as I love the added chance for corpse-encounters she brings to the story, it’s the three-way love triangle being poked at that actually interests me all the more.

Many of the stories throughout the series work from inspiration of current day events, historical facts and urban legends, and this fact along with an attractively grounded art style and real sense of personality and flaw from these characters, makes the whole series that much more compelling. There’s also the humour, which never fails to amuse. Numata, you alone never cease to entertain.

Though a little sad that previously insinuated plot directions aren’t continued here in the ninth volume, there was still the usual quality of creepy story telling along with a great final chapter chock full of character goodness. I also never tire of the quality of Dark Horse’s releases: reads well, looks awesome and has lots of translation notes for the curious. As per usual, next volume please!

Review written May 30, 2009 by Lissa Pattillo
Book purchased from Strange Adventures


Review: Kasumi (Vol. 01)


Author: Surt Lim
Manga-ka: Hirofumi Sugimoto
Publisher: DelRey
Rating: Teen (13+)
Release Date: July 2008

Synopsis: “Kasumi is a special girl – and not just because she’s a super-cute high schooler with a heart of gold. She has a major secret: She can turn invisible when she holds her breath! But when she transfers to an elite private school, it gets harder to keep her superpowers secret, especially when she catches the eye of the handsome student-council president, Ryuuki, and becomes the target of his number one fan, mean girl extraordinaire Reina. Can Kasumi keep hiding who she really is?”

The brainchild of American-born Surt Lim and aspiring manga artist in Japan, Hirofumi Sugimoto, Kasumi is the story of, as the title would suggest, Kasumi. Kasumi is a young girl who finds herself attending a surprisingly prestigious private school and quickly things take an interesting turn. From the usual female bullies, and snubbing cool guys every girl there wants a piece of, Kasumi already has her hands full… oh, and the power to go invisible.

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Review: MW


Manga-ka: Osamu Tezuka
Publisher: Vertical
Rating: Older Teen (16+)
Release Date: December 2008

Synopsis: “A secret U.S. chemical weapon called “MW” accidentally leaks and wipes out the population of a southern Japanese island. Though Michio Yuki survives, he emerges from the ordeal without a trace of conscience. MW is manga-god Osamu Tezuka’s controversial testament to the Machiavellian character and features his most direct engagement of themes such as transvestism and homoeroticism. MW is a chilling picaresque of evil. Steering clear of the supernatural as well as the cuddly designs and slapstick humor that enliven many of Tezuka’s better-known works, MW explores a stark modern reality where neither drive nor secular justice seems to prevail.”

A pretty far cry from the previews of Astro Boy I’ve read and my recently enjoyed copy of Black Jack, Osamu Tezuka’s MW is a much darker story that follows a conniving man of exceptional beauty and intellect as he seeks to own what could the most dangerous toxic chemical on Earth. With a goal to kill all humankind, and a thrill from the suffering caused for all stepping stones on his path, Michio Yuki is a man on a hideously twisted mission and loving nearly every moment of it.

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