Short Takes: Durarara!! and Kamen

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Between the Manga Movable Feast and end-of-the-semester duties, I’ve fallen hopelessly behind in my reviewing. Today’s column is a first step towards conquering my towering pile of unread books. On the agenda are two new series: Durarara!! (Yen Press), a wacky comedy set in Tokyo’s Ikebukuro district, and Kamen (Gen Manga), a martial-arts manga that’s [...]

The Earl & The Fairy, Vol. 1

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Meet Lydia Carlton: she’s a so-called “fairy doctor,” a healer who acts as an intermediary between the spirit and human worlds. The rapid advance of technology in Victorian England has made Lydia’s job obsolete; most people no longer seek magical remedies for their ailments, and view Lydia as a relic of a less enlightened time, [...]

Soulless: The Manga, Vol. 1

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Soulless is saucy in the best possible sense of the word: it’s bold and smart, with a heroine so irrepressible you can see why author Gail Carriger couldn’t tell Alexia Tarabotti’s story in just one book. As fans of Carriger’s Parasol Protectorate novels know, Alexia is a sharp-tongued woman living in Victorian London — or [...]

Drifters, Vol. 1

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Back in the 1980s — the heyday of Dolph Lundgren, Arnold Schwarzenegger, and Sylvester Stallone — Hollywood cranked out a stream of mediocre but massively entertaining B-movies in which a man with a freakishly muscular physique and a granite jaw battled the Forces of Evil, dispatching villains with a catch-phrase and a lethal weapon. I [...]

Short Takes: Dawn of the Arcana and Gate 7

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When I lived in New York City, I went on my share of awesome first dates. Those dates followed a predictable pattern: we’d go to a funky, hole-in-the-wall restaurant, have a great conversation, and discover a mutually-shared passion for Hitchcock movies or dim sum. Second dates, however, were a different story; if someone were to [...]

Dawn of the Arcana, Vol. 1

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“Today, I belong to the enemy” — so begins Dawn of the Arcana, a medieval fantasy in which a feisty princess marries into a neighboring country’s royal family. Nakaba characterizes herself as “a lamb,” sacrificed by her people to help two warring kingdoms maintain a fragile peace. Her husband, the handsome but insolent Prince Caesar, [...]

Gate 7, Vol. 1

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I have good news and bad news for CLAMP fans. The good news is that Gate 7 is one of the best-looking manga the quartet has produced, on par with Tsubasa: Reservoir Chronicles and xxxHolic. The bad news is that Gate 7‘s first volume is very bumpy, with long passages of expository dialogue and several [...]

X, Vol. 1

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As a child of the 1970s, I appreciate a good disaster flick, whether the devastation is local or global, natural or man-made. There’s something immensely satisfying about watching the world go up in flames, only to walk outside the theater and be reassured by the presence of stop lights, busses, coffee shops, and pedestrians going [...]

Bloody Monday, Vol. 1

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To judge from all the shonen manga I’ve read, the fate of the world rests in teenage boys’ hands: not only do they have the power to kill demons and thwart alien invasions, they’re also blessed with the kind of superior intelligence that makes them natural partners with law enforcement. Bloody Monday is a textbook [...]

Velveteen & Mandala

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I’m not a linguist, but I firmly believe that scatological humor is as old as language itself. Once humans created words for the most important things — food, tools, hungry predators — they promptly turned their attention to bodily functions. Ever since the first fart joke was uttered, writers have used excrement to remind us [...]