ST. Attidude (post: 1402166) wrote:I just ordered on Amazon, this unknown (and unique) work from CLAMP and I don't if it was already mentioned here or not, but try out The Legend of Chun Hyang. If you have read/like tales set in Korea, then you might especially like this.
Its probably my fave mange from CLAMP and I can't wait ^,,,V,,,^
Read it some time ago when I decided to become a CLAMP completionist. Found it easily the most forgettable of their stuff (and I read Miyuki-chan in Wonderland! Which by the way, I'm not sure anyone else here has read, which is actually commendable.)
Dr.Faust (post: 1402260) wrote:I just got Please Save my Earth and it seem good so far has anyone else read it?
I've been recommended this several times and I keep forgetting to start it. Let's see if this time it sticks.
Fish and Chips (post: 1403544) wrote:Lone Wolf and Cub and Samurai Executioner by Kazuo Koike and Goseki Kojima - 28 volumes, 10 volumes*
Something that's not a collection of short stories or a short-lived serial, though I'm aware UC at least has read Lone Wolf. Practically the grandfather of all current samurai Manga, or at least that which takes itself seriously, and Lone Wolf (and Samurai Executioner) is very serious. And very wordy - you'll need to set some time aside. Former vassal of the Shogun, Ogami Itto is framed by a rival samurai household, losing his position, wealth, authority, and family. Left only with his young son, Daigoro, the two walk the road to revenge and kill a bunch of joes with a freaking sweet baby carriage, including a dude named Yamada Asaemon who got his own story serialized in Samurai Executioner. Good reading for long nights.
I'd dare say that Lone Wolf and Cub is more known and loved by people interested in graphic novels than in manga/anime. I myself found it too wordy and the art both too sketchy and busy for my taste, so I regrettably walked away from what I know to be a good story.
Dororo by Osamu Tezuka - 4 volumes**
I should probably open by saying that Dororo is the only thing by Tezuka I've ever read, and it's very weird. An ambitious noble makes a pact with 48 demons in order to rule the world, offering in compensation the life of his expected son. When the child is born, he's malformed and hideous, the demons having each stolen one body part from him. So abandoned by the World's Best Dad, the boy is saved by a wandering medicine man who builds him fully-functioning prosthetic parts to replace everything he lost despite the fact that this is in the Sengoku Period I swear I am not making this up.
Anyway, shortly the kid grows up and decides to wander Japan looking for the 48 demons who stole his life, and possibly settle the score with his father somewhere in there. Unfortunately, Tezuka never finished this one, so your guess is as good as mine as to whether or not he meets his dad again.
[SIZE="1"]*Respectably.[/SIZE]
[SIZE="1"]**Condensed in the American print to 3 volumes.[/SIZE]
Man, as you described this I was gettig really hyped, but to learn it is unfinished crushed me. I'm one of those people that cannot enjoy the journey if I don't get closure at the end.
Blacklight (post: 1410993) wrote:And does anyone on here other than the reviewer of the manga read Petshop of Horrors? because I haven't heard it mentioned by anyone, and I'm almost finished with the series... two volumes left, and even though it gets to be somewhat frustrating, I'm looking forward to finally finishing it. (Can't make any promises about liking it overall, but I want to finish it.)
Yep. And yeah, about your suspicions (if I'm guessing correctly) it gets even more shounen-ai-sh.
To add some of my own, ever since I've been here, I haven't heard a single mention of
Masakazu Katsura or any of his jobs (Video Girl AI, I"s, DNA2, etc.) I guess that the luxury of detail the guy uses when portraying, er, female derrières and the seeming ubiquitousness of them is a deal breaker for some, but they are actually quite competent and realistic (read flawed) love stories with lots of interesting ideas thrown in.
3x3 Eyes is a great, old shounen manga that was recently finished. I'm aware it is kind of well known, but it remains mostly unreleased so not sure how many people have actually read it here.
Not sure how well known it is here, but if you like One Piece, do yourself a favor and pick
Wanted, Oda's compilation of short stories.
Finally, there's a manga I read some years ago and which name I unfortunately can't remember and haven't heard of ever again, so hopefully someone here knows it. My memory is fuzzy but it's about an apathetic young man who inherits a temple and its adjacent plot of land, then turns out that the land starts being invaded and claimed by different factions that include underground earth-people, aliens and time travelers. Our hero has a short temper and so he becomes the straight man for the antics of the colorful invaders as he tries to reclaim his peace and tranquility. Really good art, laugh-out-loud humor and very quirky writing made it my favorite at the time. Unfortunately, it was unlicensed and the scanlation group went into hiatus and I only recently remembered about it again.