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Comics Have Never Been So Much Fun

Monthly April 22, 2008:
CWN and the Grand Finale!
-

Flipped

Weekly February 4, 2008:
In Conclusion
- David ends his CWN run with Tezuka's MW from Vertical

Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now

Monthly February 2, 2008:
Acting Like You Have Nothing to Prove
-

The Draft

Weekly February 2, 2008:
The Shoegazer Returns
- A New Year Begins, And Our Narrator Makes A Pledge

Judgment Day

Weekly January 30, 2008:
Tim's Reviews
-

Pull List

Weekly September 13, 2007:
Wizard World Chicago Loot, Part One
- Stykman, Empty Chamber, the Ztarian Saga, and yes, Little Bunny Foo Foo

Guttermouth

Weekly February 15, 2007:
I Come Not to Bury Nick Cage...
- But to mourn the death of my punchline

Chicks and Romance

Bi-weekly November 20, 2006:
The End
- Rich's last Chicks & Romance

Past the Front Racks

Weekly November 8, 2006:
Joann Sfar's Klezmer
- And a Front Racks Hiatus

Fathers' Day

Monthly October 4, 2006:
This Month's Guest: Dave Gibbons
- From the pages of Elephantmen!

Avoiding Extinction

Monthly September 18, 2006:
Back in Berlin
- or How I spent my summer

Comics and Crumpets

Monthly July 29, 2006:
KICKING UP A STORM
- An interview with David Lloyd

Grim Tidings

Bi-weekly June 19, 2006:
You Ain't Never Had A Friend Like Me.
- Graeme looks at Spidey's "genies"

That's News to Me

Weekly December 18, 2005:
Disappointed
- Sad news for fans of Busiek's CONAN, Stephen King, and others

From the Other Side

Monthly December 13, 2004:
JUSTICE UNPLUGGED 2 at last !!!
- By Fabrice Sapolsky & Xavier Fournier

12 Step Program

Monthly December 2, 2004:
THE TWELFTH AND FINAL STEP
- Say it ain't so, Dan.

Time of the Month

Weekly November 23, 2004:
The importance of editing
-

Mysteries and Conundrums

Monthly September 29, 2004:
Mystery and Conundrum indeed!
- Where in the world is Jason Pomerantz?

Border Patrol

Weekly September 13, 2004:
Hello and Goodbye and Hello Again
- Change is in the air at CWN and it smells sweet.

Quoth the Raiven

Weekly August 12, 2004:
The Rise of the Web Toon
- New Business Model or Dumb Luck?

Spin Doctors

Weekly July 30, 2004:
The Name Says it All...
- Spin Doctors revamp Boomerang.

Making It Up As I Go

Weekly July 27, 2004:
Bigger Isn't Always Better
-

Subsurface Communications

Weekly June 8, 2004:
Pre-emptive Strike: MoCCA Arts Festival
- Looking forward to the con, rather than looking back at it


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Monthly The Layer Method
Our top Secret time-saving technique for creating and merging balloons and tails in Illustrator.

Flipped

Friday, September 3, 2010

Lonely People

It’s been a good couple of years for the socially inept manga character. First there was Del Rey’s release of Kio Shimoku’s quirky, charming Genshiken, about a college club full of otaku. Then there was the multi-front invasion of some dweeb who protected a girl from a grabby drunk on a train, spawning novel, three manga adaptations, and a movie. Charming as all of these are, there was an undercurrent of opinion that they all tended to whitewash the misfit experience. If you really wanted to walk in the shoes of a loser, the argument went, your clear choice was Welcome to the N.H.K. (Tokyopop).




















Tatsuhiko Takimoto’s novel and the manga adaptation by Kendi Oiwa tell the tale of Satou, who has taken antisocial behavior to a level just shy of the Unabomber. The college drop-out hasn’t left his dingy apartment in months except for late-night trips to the convenience store to retrieve what passes for sustenance. He’s a “hikikomori,” part of a distressing trend where young people isolate themselves from society, though he’d deny it if you applied the term to him.


It’s just such a denial that forces him out of his hygienically suspect cocoon. In the course of their missionary work, young Misaki and her aunt pay a visit to Satou’s den, and he handles it with the level of savoir faire you’d expect. His utter terror at the invasion both confirms his hikikomori status and sparks a burning desire to overcome it (short of actually admitting to it). Misaki is intrigued by his state and invites Satou to participate in an experiment in social engineering; she’ll reintroduce him to society if he only follows her instructions to the letter.


What follows are Satou’s feeble attempts to escape the hikikomori lifestyle, with perilous detours into the world of lolicon game development, homemade hallucinogens, and organized religion. It sounds scabrous and ostentatiously transgressive, and it kind of teeters on the verge, but the novel, smartly adapted and translated by Laura Wyrick and Lindsey Akashi, is really very sweet. (I’m sorry, but it is.) If Takimoto isn’t particularly generous to his characters, he’s ultimately very forgiving. Instead of churning out a sensational expose of a societal ill, it’s closer in spirit to the short stories of David Sedaris – wildly satirical, sharply rendered, and with just enough hope to make the whole thing rewarding.


(I’m less impressed with the manga, which is faithful to the events of the novel but misses its spirit by a good distance. I found it shrill and too reliant on easy laughs in comparison to the subtle, slightly surreal prose version.)


*




















The protagonist of Mari Okazaki’s Suppli (Tokyopop) is dealing with the end of her own kind of self-imposed isolation. Advertising executive Minami’s seven-year relationship has come to a not entirely unexpected or unwelcome end, and she’s decided to throw herself into work to fill the void. It’s not a professional rededication, as she’s always worked hard; it’s more of a decision to engage her co-workers on a personal level.


Minami is winningly clumsy as she tries to befriend people she’s worked with for years. She’s seeing things though new eyes, essentially reevaluating dynamics she’d previously taken for granted. Without the security of a relationship or the firm compartmentalization of her professional and personal lives, everything is heightened and slightly strange.


There’s a fairly pedestrian love triangle. Everyone since Richard Brinsley Sheridan (and well before him) has been presenting young women with the choice between rough edges and apparent respectability, and neither of Minami’s potential suitors bring much that’s new to the equation. I strongly suspect that who-will-she-choose waffling wasn’t Okazaki’s central point, though.


The main attraction is watching Minami function in a demanding workplace. There are successes and failures, moments where she saves the day through tenacity and skill, and points where her creative, carefully conceived ideas are shot down. The inspiration-to-perspiration ratio of Minami’s advertising job is just right, and it’s nice to see a career rendered with so much care and detail.


*





















Given the choice between one of Fumi Yoshinaga’s contemporary stories and one of her period pieces, I’d take the near-present almost any time. Her potent wit and emotional specificity seem to be muted when she busts out the frock coats. But as many wiser commentators have noted, even lesser Yoshinaga is well worth a read.


That’s pretty much my assessment of Garden Dreams (DMP), a mildly moody trifle of interconnected stories about love and loss among the Crusaders. It doesn’t come anywhere near the heights of Antique Bakery, Flower of Life, or Ichigenme: The First Class Is Civil Law, but there are substantial pleasures to be found all the same.


The setting is the baronial estate of a gloomy widower. His staff expands with the arrival of a pair of Middle Eastern bards who have left their unspecified homeland behind in the wake of terrible personal losses. Their music cheers the baron and intrigues his adopted daughter, another Middle Eastern refugee. Some singularly ridiculous coincidences lead to the revelation of dark secrets, new beginnings, and a whole lot of asexual healing.


Though the architecture of the book is pretty much hogwash, Yoshinaga’s creative way with emotional interplay is very much in evidence. The baron’s marital history is a moving piece of romantic tragedy. The creator’s perverse sense of humor is on display as well, puncturing her own somber atmosphere in delightfully unexpected ways. It’s no masterpiece, even by the standards of Yoshinaga’s period pieces, but it’s a pleasant diversion between volumes of Flower of Life.


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David Welsh explores the marvelous world of manga.

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• Fat and Happy

• Instruction Manuals
Manga Bible and Manga Sutra

• New Beats
Sand Chronicles and Honey and Clover

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• Read These
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The Silencers: Black Kiss

Caught between superheroes and villains

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Fox Bunny Funny

We all rebel in our own ways

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Icon A Comic-Con without the Captain
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Headlines

Friday, February 8, 2008

• The End.
So long. Farewell. Auf Wiedersehen. Good night.

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

• Closing time
You don't have to go home...

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

• Oni resurrects letters columns
Resurrection series features letter-writing contest

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

• And... we're back
With Red 5 info

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

• Happy Thanksgiving!
From aka Comics and Comic World News

• Happy Birthday, COMICRAFT!
Lettering powerhouse and CWN sponsor turns 15

Monday, November 19, 2007

• Surrogates movie ready to start production
Bruce Willis to star

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