oyceter: man*ga [mahng' guh] n. Japanese comics. synonym: CRACK (manga is crack)
This is an adaptation of the anime of the same name, although I can't tell if Shinkai Makoto mostly came up with the original storyline for the anime and Sahara Mizu did the adaptation, or if Shinkai wrote it and she illustrated it.

I've been a fan of Sahara Mizu's art for a while (she also works as Yumeka Sumomo); she's particularly good at bittersweet wistfulness and empty spaces and words left unsaid. This adaptation is no different.

In the future, humans have discovered the existence of alien life in the form of the Tarsians. No one knows yet if they're hostile or not, although missions are already being sent out to fight the Tarsians and to find new worlds. Mikako, a middle-school student, has volunteered to be the pilot of one of the missions' mechas. Unfortunately, this means that she has to leave behind her good friend Noboru. They try to keep in touch via text messages, but as Mikako is sent further and further away, the messages take longer and longer to arrive, until they're over eight years apart.

Normally I'm not one for stories that posit someone's One True Love is found in middle school, but Sahara and Shinkai handle the material with such delicacy that I found myself rooting for Mikako and Noboru. It also helps that both Mikako and Noboru are unsure of each other as well; Mikako is torn by the knowledge that years are passing by on Earth while she remains the same age, and Noboru tries and tries to move on with his life and not wait for increasing infrequent text messages. But the lack of resolution keeps both of them from moving on.

I loved the overall tone of this manga, the uncertainty and doubt, the simple and sweet flashbacks to Mikako and Noboru riding bikes or hiding from the rain, all of which distinguish it from all the other giant robot series that have middle-school students battling aliens. While there is some action when it comes to the giant robots and the Tarsians, the bulk of the story is about Mikako and Noboru and how they're separated by time. And though the ending is somewhat unresolved, it worked for me. There's no guarantee that anything will turn out all right; in fact, I'm fairly certain there will be more pain to come, but that's what makes the story work for me.
oyceter: man*ga [mahng' guh] n. Japanese comics. synonym: CRACK (manga is crack)
This is why I don't make New Year's Resolutions to read less manga: the statistics would come out the next year, and I would laugh in my own face. The scary thing is this list doesn't include random scanlations or recent chapters of series I follow, and it's still at 275 volumes!

As usual, these are my favorite things read this year, not published this year. I'm also keeping manga separate from comics; this is an entirely arbitrary distinction and depends not only on the paper size of the book, but also whether or not I feel it's going for the manga feel or not. For 2008, I'm going to stick everything together as "sequential art," but since my spreadsheet from last year was set up to separate manga from everything else, no such luck for now.

Sadly, I have skimpy numbers for manhwa, which I am going to try to remedy this year. I was surprised to see I only have two repeats from last year (Emma and Cain Saga/Godchild), though I have four author repeats (Mori Kaoru, Minekura Kazuya, Mizushiro Setona and Yuki Kaori). I liked my runner ups much more than I liked my runner ups from last year, though that's mainly because I've been reading more manga. I know, what a shocker.

Continuing series Naruto, Fruits Basket and Saiyuki (including Reload and Gaiden) fell off my list this year. I don't even have Naruto on my list of manga read, but that's largely because I read chapters as they came out. Possibly reading individual chapters instead of volumes of manga dampened my enthusiasm, although I think a larger part of it is because we're stuck in another long fighting arc I don't care much about. I'm still waiting for my favorite characters to get back into action and very sick of Sasuke's angst about twenty volumes ago, thankyouverymuch. I just haven't read any Fruits Basket this year, aside from rereads, and while new volumes of Saiyuki Reload came out this year (most notably the exciting volume 7), they're all volumes I read last year in Japanese.

The only reason Honey and Clover isn't on here is because the first three volumes a) aren't out in the US and b) follow the anime so closely that I can't quite figure out what to say.

I have individual volume write ups linked via tags for the top ten and runners up, but I'm too lazy to link the entire list of stuff I read. Anything without an asterisk has been written up before; check my tags or memories. If you're curious about something I haven't written up, feel free to ask!

Series alphabetized by author.

  1. CLAMP, xxxHolic and Tsubasa Reservoir Chronicle )


  2. Higuri You, Cantarella )


  3. Minekura Kazuya, Wild Adapter )


  4. Mizushiro Setona, After School Nightmare )


  5. Mori Kaoru, Emma )


  6. Soryo Fuyumi, Eternal Sabbath )


  7. Urasawa Naoki, Monster and 20th Century Boys )


  8. Urushibara Yuki, Mushishi )


  9. Yazawa Ai, Nana and Tenshi Nanka Ja Nai )


  10. Yuki Kaori, Cain Saga/Godchild )


  11. Yumeka Sumomo, The Day I Became a Butterfly )


Also recommended: Arakawa Hiromu, Fullmetal Alchemist; Svetlana Chmakova, Dramacon; Hayakawa Tomoko, The Wallflower; Ogawa Yayoi, Tramps Like Us; Takeuchi Mick, Her Majesty's Dog; Yoshinaga Fumi, Antique Bakery; Yun Mi-Kyung, Bride of the Water God

Notes )

Total read: 275 (40 rereads)

Complete list of manga read in 2007 )
oyceter: man*ga [mahng' guh] n. Japanese comics. synonym: CRACK (manga is crack)
Completely unrelated PSA: Loretta Chase's new book is out!

I read the mangaka's Same Cell Organism yesterday, which was so gorgeous that I ended up reading this one and buying it. I need to go back and acquire Same Cell Organism as well.

Like Same Cell Organism, The Day I Become a Butterfly is also a collection of short stories; some are BL and some aren't, but they're all infused with the same wistful, quiet melancholy and joy. The titular story is on the dying Uka and somewhat psychic Mikami, who apparently can sense when people are about to die. Cue gorgeously understated and quiet angst! Others are on childhood friends and a girl who fears change (het); a girl trying to disentangle herself from affairs and draw; and two 16-year-old boys, one of whom purports to be an alien. The last one is sweet and funny and a nice look at being different; I didn't expect to like it, but it made me laugh with the ending:

Ulala Nakazawa (16), currently residing in Tokyo, is still, as always, an alien.

Yuzuru Yoshimoto (16), currently residing in Tokyo, this day transfers citizenship to a nation in space.


And from the childhood friends one: "The lonely war. Hailing bullets of happiness. Yellow flowers. / And next to me -- you."

A small warning: some of Yumeka's boys look just like girls. Or, er, even more so than manga boys usually do. I stared at the het story and decided that since the character had long hair (not so telling) and was in a girl's school uniform with skirt, she was probably a she. Though really, even with the school uniform, you can never be sure in manga. (She was a she in that one though.)

I have clearly gone from simply enjoying these to wanting people to read them. This collection and Same Cell Organism are more BL than yaoi; this one also has non-romantic character studies as well. The art and paneling are gorgeous, spare and clean and evocative. The sensibility of the mangaka reminds me a little of the Nishi Keiko shorts that I've read.

Nothing really happens in any of the stories; it's the art and the minimal prose that I love.
oyceter: man*ga [mahng' guh] n. Japanese comics. synonym: CRACK (manga is crack)
(yes, the lack of a hyphen in the title is still bugging me)

This is a really gorgeous collection of BL short stories. The stories themselves don't have much plot: two high school guys, one shy and one not as much, have a relationship and discuss their future. An angel gives up angelhood to be with someone. Two high school students who enjoy being alone find that they enjoy each other's company in the attic.

Guess which one was the one that made me pick up the book?

There's this sense of wistfulness about all the stories, which are all about people who might have drifted through the world if it weren't for finding the other. The art and the panel layout echoes this: the art is spare and sketchy and sometimes seems to disappear into the page; and the panels are open, lots of white space and open-ness. I love just looking at it. Also, part of the aesthetics may have been enhanced by the good paper stock; it's thick and white and the blacks stand out superbly.

Also, [livejournal.com profile] vom_marlowe! It uses lots of wordless sequences! And I love how the panels focus on the small details -- a hand reaching out to another, someone bending down to kiss another person and then deciding at the last minute not to. I just love how spare and lovely it all is; there's so little dialogue, and yet, the mangaka nails the moods perfectly.

I am going to hunt down her other translated manga now.

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