starlady: (impending)
[personal profile] starlady
Urasawa Naoki. 20th Century Boys. 22 vols. Tokyo: Shogakkan, 2000-07. [Also available in English translation.]

It is my great good fortune that my public library has the first twelve volumes of this manga in Japanese, because holy crap is it good.

The premise is brilliant, brilliant, brilliant: What would you do if, well into your rather boring life, you were suddenly reminded of the games you and your friends used to play when you were children, games in which the world was brought to the brink of disaster? And what would you do if those games suddenly started becoming true? In 20th Century Boys that's just what happens; a group of loosely connected old school friends gradually realize after the murder of one of their own that another of their old friends, who calls himself 'Friend' and has started a cult, is turning their old games into a very dangerous reality.

The main character is Kenji, the scion of an liquor store family who turned the shop into a convenience store and who's been saddled with his sister's kid to raise; his other school comrades gradually come into focus over the course of the manga; they're a nice cross-section of fairly ordinary middle-class lives in the Tokyo suburbs, which might as well be Anytown, Japan, but the characters aren't stock types, to Urasawa's credit.

I really, really can't say enough about Urasawa, and how awesome he is--right from the beginning the sense of pacing in this manga is phenomenal, and phenomenally sure, and the dialogue is frequently funny to boot. His art style is a bit jarring after reading lots of CLAMP and shoujo, but it's very dramatic, and well-suited to the subject matter. He has two other manga, Monster and Pluto, available in English, and I've heard they're just as good.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-10-01 02:00 (UTC)
jibrailis: (kill bill)
From: [personal profile] jibrailis
I was just reading 20th Century Boys a few days ago! I didn't think I would like it since the premise is basically a boy's club of sorts, but it turned out so brilliant, I don't even know.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-10-01 02:07 (UTC)
jibrailis: (kill bill)
From: [personal profile] jibrailis
Well, there will be more female characters later, and good ones at that! Man, I just inhaled the entire series in one go (my local library was stocked with it -- joy!)

(no subject)

Date: 2010-10-01 02:11 (UTC)
ein_myria: (Default)
From: [personal profile] ein_myria
There's movies and also, 21st century boys. :)

I also like Urasawa's Master Keaton collaboration series, which is about spies, archaeology, and antiquity.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-10-01 02:36 (UTC)
laceblade: (Arthur!Spider-Man)
From: [personal profile] laceblade
I effing love this series! I love Urasawa - I watched the Monster anime first, but it's just like the manga. SO GOOD. I was surprised by how much I liked Pluto, too. OM NOM NOM.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-10-01 08:05 (UTC)
marshtide: (Default)
From: [personal profile] marshtide
Monster is so excellent, though I'm getting through it very slowly indeed thanks to the fact that I have nightmares if I poke it too much. And I know Val is enthusing about Pluto at the moment! He really is good, that guy.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-10-01 08:54 (UTC)
yifu: (// jillicons @ lj)
From: [personal profile] yifu
I hope your library has the rest of the volumes!

In the middle I feel the story rambles on a bit, but then the plot threads come together and...well, read it yourself. Urasawa is a great writer as well as a great artist, a rare and delightful combination.

ETA: And I definitely definitely recommend Monster and Pluto.
Edited Date: 2010-10-01 08:55 (UTC)

(no subject)

Date: 2010-10-01 15:59 (UTC)
hl: Drawing of Ada Lovelace as a young child, reading a Calculus book (Default)
From: [personal profile] hl
Monster's author? I'll have to read that!

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