Review Redux: Now You’re One of Us

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Noriko, the young heroine of Asa Nonami’s Now You’re One of Us, initially thinks she’s hit the marriage jackpot. Not only are her in-laws wealthy and well regarded by their neighbors, they’re also quick to embrace her as a member of the family. Her husband Kazuhito is handsome and utterly devoted; her mother-in-law Kimie, generous [...]

Review Redux: Gosick, Vol. 1

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American publishers have been trying to market light novels to manga fans for close to a decade, with mixed results. Though Dark Horse’s Vampire Hunter D books have sold more than 300,000 units, few other companies can claim similar success with light novels. TOKYOPOP, for example, launched its Pop Fiction imprint in 2006 with several [...]

Short Takes: Dragon Sword and Wind Child, The Story of Saiunkoku, and Summoner Girl

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I know the phrase “girl power” — and its misspelled variant, “grrrrl power” — is terribly 2000, but bear with me: this week’s column is a celebration of female power, highlighting three recent releases with smart, capable heroines. In the case of Dragon Sword and Wind Child (VIZ), a fantasy novel, the heroine is a [...]

Summer, Fireworks, and My Corpse

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At some point in your travels through high school English, a teacher probably made you read Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery,” a short story about a rural community that routinely sacrifices one its members to ensure a good harvest. I remember writing a paper about “The Lottery” my freshman year. Like many of my classmates, I [...]

Harmony

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VIZ launched its Haikasoru imprint in 2009, with the goal of bringing Japan’s best speculative fiction to the US. Haikasoru’s debut titles — All You Need Is Kill and The Lord of the Sands of Time — introduced Americans to two award-winning sci-fi authors whose work had previously been unavailable in English. As the line [...]

Short Takes: Dorohedoro, Vampire Hunter D, and A Wind Named Amnesia/Invader Summer

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If I were to draw a Venn diagram with three circles — “horror,” “fantasy,” and “things I like to read” — the overlap among these categories would be very small. As part of my year-long effort to stretch myself as a reader and reviewer, therefore, I decided to take a gander at three titles that [...]

Missin' and Missin' 2: Kasako

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After reading Missin’ and Missin’ 2, I’m convinced that novelist Novala Takemoto was a teenage girl in a previous life. But not the kind of girl who was on the cheerleading squad, the volleyball team, or the school council — no, Takemoto was the too-cool-for-school girl, the one whose unique fashion sense, sullen demeanor, and [...]

The Cat in the Coffin

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The year is 1955. Twenty-year-old Masayo, an aspiring painter from Hakodate, apprentices herself to Goro Kawabuko, a handsome widower who teaches at a Tokyo art college. In exchange for a weekly lesson, Masayo agrees to keep house for Goro and tutor his daughter Momoko, a strange, withdrawn child whose only companion is a regal white [...]