Tag Archives: Dystopia

21st Century Boys (vol. 2) by Naoki Urasawa, with the cooperation of Takashi Nagasaki, English adaptation by Akemi Wegmüller

21st Century Boys 2So why is it that all good things are supposed to come to an end? I’d be perfectly happy with another 20 more volumes. Really, is that too much to ask?

With an enormously huffy sigh of resignation, I moaningly offer a final post for Naoki Urasawa’s 20th-into-21st Century Boys. Yup, this is it. Really. The series stops here.

The Friend might be dead, but total annihilation still looms. Kenji’s gone virtual, searching for desperate answers by confronting his own 20th-century-boy past in order to find the anti-proton bomb detonator and prevent the latest threat to world destruction. Meanwhile, Kanna is out in the real world trying to find the same remote control, even as less-than-cooperative representatives of the supposed-to-be-peacekeeping UN Forces think she’s the “devil’s daughter” and impede her any way they can. While everyone is on high-octane search mode, the Giant Robot suddenly starts moving … ready to initiate Armageddon one last time. Be warned: “All kinds of stuff up the road for you, kid …”

I only wish that meant more Urasawa ‘stuff’ for me, sniff-sniff. First Monster, then Pluto, and now 20th-21st Century Boys. All finished! Withdrawal starts now. I guess I can always line up all 18 + 8 + 24 volumes, respectively, and have my own in-denial-mangafest … maybe facing the endings get easier the 16th time around or so?

Oh, Naoki Urasawa – wherefore art thou my next series?

Readers: Young Adult, Adult

Published: 2013 (United States)
21 SEIKI SHONEN © Naoki Urasawa/Studio Nuts
Original Japanese edition published by Shogakukan Inc.

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Filed under ..Adult Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Fiction, .Graphic Novel/Manga/Manwha, .Translation, Japanese

The Hunger Games Trilogy: The Hunger Games, Catching Fire, and Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins

Hunger Games 1-3

The day I stuck Hunger Games into my ears, Jennifer Lawrence won Best Actress Oscar, albeit for her role in a different film, Silver Livings Playbook. I took that as a sign that I should finish the almost 35 hours (every bit admirably read by Carolyn McCormick) of this history-making trilogy, just to figure out why it’s such an international favorite – this generation has come of age guided by Harry Potter and Katniss Everdeen! I gave up on HP (blasphemy!) after four volumes, but a trilogy I could handle.

For the five readers who might miraculously be unaware of this cultural phenomenon (I was one of them! I shockingly managed to stay virtually oblivious to the storyline and no, I haven’t seen the film – although I did creepily imagine Donald Sutherland as the heartless President Snow, and egads, there he is in celluloid!), here’s a quick overview (with minimal spoilers) …

Welcome to Panem in a post-apocalyptic North America, made up of 12 districts and one controlling Capitol. As a reminder that rebellion is futile, every year, one boy and one girl ages 12 to 18 from each district are chosen by lottery to be sent to the Capitol where they will fight to their deaths in the Hunger Games. The final surviving child is declared victor. In District 12, Katniss Everdeen volunteers to take her younger sister’s place, and Peter Mellark who once saved Katniss’ family’s life from starvation, is chosen to accompany her for the 74th rendition. They’re accompanied by their mentor, a bitter, belligerent, drunken Haymitch Abernathy, who was crowned victor of the 50th Hunger Games.

At the core of Catching Fire is the 75th Hunger Games; as with each “Quarter Quell” – which happens every 25 years – unexpected new rules are introduced and this time, past victors – again, one male, one female – from each district must return to the Capitol for another murderous round. The slaughter of the latest Game is interrupted midway … but the real body count has barely begun. That comes in the gory, gruesome conclusion, Mockingjay, in which Katniss fulfills her duties to District 13 (surprise! it’s not a wasteland) and her own promise of murder as the eponymous Mockingjay of the rebellion.

A longtime close friend (we’ve actually been to Platform 9¾ together, even though we’ve agreed to disagree about a certain wizard) recently asked if I ‘liked’ Hunger Games. My answer would be an immediate ‘no.’ Too much self-absorbed babbling, too much slaughter, too rushed an ending after an over-prolonged bloodbath, are at the top of a long-enough list of why not. But if she asked me if the series kept my attention, made me react strongly, made me think long after the 35th hour, I’d offer a definitive ‘yes’ to all. In a phrase, the almost 1,200 pages comprise a mythic (think “Theseus and the Minotaur“) anti-war treatise. For the human race which seems determined to repeat history – even far into the future! – perhaps endless reminders of such horror are our best (only?) defense.

[Heinous] Tidbit: Rabid Hunger Games fans made the film adaptation a racist battleground when they sent tweets that went viral blasting the depiction of two characters, Rue and Thresh, by African American actress Amandla Stenberg, and Nigerian-born actor Day Okeniyi, respectively. I can only link here, because I can’t bear to re-type such hate. Not only racist, might these detractors also be illiterate? “She has dark brown skin and eyes…” (p. 45 in the 2009 paperback reprint), and “Thresh, has the same dark skin as Rue …” (p. 126). Nervous fear for the next generations looms large; what’s happening to multi-culti, post-racial progress?

[Happy] Tidbit: What timing that Fire posters are ubiquitous this week. I admit that the addition of Philip Seymour Hoffman to the cast of Fire just might send me to the movies (I haven’t seen any of his films, but he’s an unforgettable powerhouse on stage). But the best reason to catch Fire? Half of my brother’s childhood closest friends (they’re twins) co-wrote the screen adaptation! Fire opens November 22, 2013.

Readers: Middle Grade, Young Adult, Adult

Published: 2008, 2009, 2010

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Filed under ..Adult Readers, ..Middle Grade Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Audio, .Fiction, Nonethnic-specific

The City of Devi by Manil Suri + Author Interview

Let’s go back about seven years.

So a writer walks into a bar. It’s dark, but thankfully not smoky. The majority of the people there are more bookish (including Booker-ish!) than biker brutish. The writer finds a drink, and is standing slightly off the side with a couple of companions.

The trendy bar is the venue where the venerable Smithsonian Institution’s Asian Pacific American Center (my former day job) and its co-sponsor, the Network of South Asian Professionals, are hosting a pre-event welcome reception in anticipation of the annual South Asian Literary and Theater Arts Festival that begins in just over 12 hours. The close friends and admirers of four notable writers (including Kiran Desai, fresh from her 2006 Booker win) and two filmmakers with a debut film each, have gathered to celebrate. Among the guests, although not slated for the Smithsonian stage (that year – his turn comes two years later), is Manil Suri.

At first sight, he’s exactly as I expected the author of an exquisite, nuanced literary novel – The Death of Vishnu, his 2001 award-winning debut about the memorable inhabitants of a Bombay apartment building – who also happens to be a university mathematics professor, might look like. He’s elegant, genteel, and soft-spoken; he has an ever-so-slight hint of nervous energy about him, but that could be because his mind is moving so quickly that the rest of his body needs to contain his excess brain cells somehow.

So much for first impressions.

By the time he takes the Smithsonian stage in 2008, he’s published the second installment of his planned trilogy, The Age of Shiva, which features a headstrong young woman who becomes an overly protective mother to her less than appreciative only son. Suri’s literary star has been highly polished over the years since his debut, as have his creative impulses. What’s making the Internet rounds just in time for his Smithsonian appearance is a most revealing – campy, shocking, delightfully entertaining – video of Suri at the Brooklyn Book Festival, garbed in elaborately embroidered red drag, channeling his inner Bollywood diva. He certainly proved he can do more than just write bestsellers and teach a mean linear algebra class.

This month, Suri completes his promised trilogy with The City of Devi. Kiran Desai provides the most prominent blurb: “The City of Devi combines, in a magician’s feat, the thrill of Bollywood with the pull of a thriller… Manil Suri’s bravest and most passionate book.” If Vishnu was subtle and controlled, and Shiva impetuous and emotional, then Devi proves to be a psychedelic, surreal overthrow of expectations and conventions.

The end of the world – at least in one part of India – is nigh. The apocalypse is coming in four days, delivered via nuclear bomb directly to the city of Bombay. For the first time in centuries, the teeming city is virtually empty as its citizens flee in hopes of finding shelter somewhere, somehow. Sarita is one of the few left behind, frantically searching for her missing husband Karun who walked out of their apartment – into global chaos – claiming he was attending a conference.

Meanwhile, a mysterious young man seems to be following her: Jaz trails Sarita, his hopes also focused on Karun… and what will happen if they actually find him? In a lawless new world in which a single religious label is enough to excuse murder, cause war, and threaten complete annihilation, Sarita and Jaz are running toward true love. Just who belongs to whom will be a wee small detail they’ll have to work out, after they survive gangs, kidnappings, glowing goddess servants, elephants, a levitating multi-armed goddess-in-training with quite the nasty temper, and an evil thug with a bit of a God-complex. Oh, and did I mention the steamy sex scenes? Somebody (or rather, some bodies) must practice how to repopulate the world after annihilation, even if reproduction isn’t the actual goal. Practice makes perfect, right?

Did you plan Vishnu, Shiva, and Devi as a trilogy from the beginning?
The plan for a trilogy happened after I wrote the first book, The Death of Vishnu. I realized there were three deities in the Hindu trinity, Vishnu, Shiva and Brahma, so why not a book for each? By the time I tried to back out of this rash announcement, my publisher was already excited about the idea, so my agent told me I was writing a trilogy whether I liked it or not. After the second book, it became clear that what I had was a triptych, rather than a trilogy (since the characters and plots were unconnected), and by the time I started writing the third, poor Brahma (who’s supposed to create the universe in a single breath) had been shunted aside by the mother goddess Devi. Devi does make more sense than Brahma, because she has a lot more worshippers than he does. Besides, in the words of Karun’s father from the book, “Creation comes from the womb, not the breath.” And, of course, there’s Mumbai, which is a common thread in all three books. The patron goddess of the city is Mumbadevi. [... click here for more]

Author interview: Feature: “An Interview with Manil Suri,” Bookslut.com, February 2013

Readers: Adult

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Filed under ..Adult Readers, .Fiction, Indian, Indian American, South Asian, South Asian American

21st Century Boys (vol. 1) by Naoki Urasawa, with the cooperation of Takashi Nagasaki, English adaptation by Akemi Wegmüller

21st Century Boys 1First things first … or, rather, 21st first: Yes, this is volume 1 of 21st Century Boys, but it’s also sort of volume 23 – and the penultimate installment, oh no! – of the heart-thumping, high-octane 22-volume 20th Century Boys series. Different century, same Kenji (well … ‘sort of’ same Kenji, actually), same friends (uhh … ‘sort of’ there, too), but definitely the same series (for sure).

While the huge survivor crowd in Expo Park starts breaking out with strains of “gutala-laaaa … sudala-laaaa,” the recently-returned Kenji refuses to join in: “I ain’t singing it.” But before the audience can even get restless, a flying saucer comes crashing out of the sky wreaking total havoc … and Kenji ends up singing for a dying audience of one. The Friend is dead again, but this time for real. We think.

Kenji is an international hero, even if he disagrees. The war finally seems to be over: “Humanity won.” The United Nations has moved into a newly liberated Tokyo, asking everyone to “remain calm and peaceful.” People are planning and dreaming and living their lives again. Except for Kenji’s and friends: Kanna sits alone with Sadakiyo who drifts in and out of consciousness in a hospital room, utterly uncertain of her relationship with the uncle for whom she waited almost her entire life; Yukiji and Kenji are still fighting over the same misunderstandings because some things never change; and maybe Kenji’s gotten too used to his solitary life out there to really be part of the group again.

Reunion proves bittersweet, not to mention the world just isn’t safe yet. The Friend might be gone, but his death-note is chilling: “An anti-proton bomb will destroy the world.” So Kenji’s going solo all over again … virtually running back in time to see who his real friends are, once and for all! The looming ultimate question, though: will he be able to return to the real world?

My own real world is gonna be in for some serious shock when that final volume pubs mid-March. Ai-yahhhh and ai-gooooo … I see many, many 21st-century days of withdrawal ahead, egads!

Readers: Young Adult, Adult

Published: 2013 (United States)
21 SEIKI SHONEN © Naoki Urasawa/Studio Nuts
Original Japanese edition published by Shogakukan Inc.

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20th Century Boys (vol. 22) by Naoki Urasawa, with the cooperation of Takashi Nagasaki, English adaptation by Akemi Wegmüller

Confession first: even though I’m posting after the fact, reading this was a little birthday present to myself. The older I get, oh how I loooovvvvve the manga that much more! Must be an age-escapist thing!

The Friend has shockingly confessed that he’s the mastermind behind the destruction of the world thus far, and he’s going to annihilate the rest in the next seven days. Hoping against all odds to stay alive, the survivors are hiding in their homes trying to escape the flying saucers with their fatal virus-inducing spray. Tokyo is suddenly, eerily quiet, but the underground revolutionaries have their own plans for survival – armed with vaccines, bad-buys-turned-good, another behemoth robot, the “emblem of justice” … and so much more.

Kanna knows the only safe place is Expo Park, and she’s planning an enormous music festival to draw everyone there. Getting the big name performers to show up is just gonna be a minor detail, right? In order to get the masses rocking (and evacuating), Konchi wires up what’s left of a radio tower, and suddenly, the city is humming, singing, shouting, revolution-ing to the latest version of “guta-lala … suda-lala” … which can only mean that the song’s originator is really back … “to settle things, once and for all.”

Got goosebumps?

Tidbit: Just to clarify, while this volume 22 is the final 20th Century Boys, the series has two more volumes under the fast-forward title of 21st Century Boys. Make sure to stay tuned. In the meantime, check out all the previous volumes of 20th Century Boys by clicking here.

Readers: Young Adult, Adult

Published: 2012 (United States)
20 SEIKI SHONEN © Naoki Urasawa/Studio Nuts
Original Japanese edition published by Shogakukan Inc.

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20th Century Boys (vol. 21) by Naoki Urasawa, with the cooperation of Takashi Nagasaki, English adaptation by Akemi Wegmüller

As this is the penultimate volume in the 22-part series, I suppose I should have savored it … but, egads, patience is just not my virtue! Now I have almost a two-month wait, as volume 22 hits shelves September 18. How am I gonna hold out that long??!!

So … what happened here? Well, I certainly can’t tell you everything … but I will reveal (only because you’ll find out on the introductory “Profiles” page even before the panels begin) that a certain hero is out walking the streets … and headed straight to Tokyo.

Meanwhile, the Friend has apparently passed on his genes to a most unmotherly candidate, although who really knows what a paternity suit might reveal. While ordinary citizens think they’ll find salvation on Mars, flying saucers spraying blood-like emissions are making quite the mess of Tokyo. Bowling seems to be coming back into the limelight and a new President of the World is about to take a stand.

Yup, no doubt: The final showdown is definitely coming … [I think 'patience' should have been a four-letter word!]

To check out all the previous volumes of 20th Century Boys (which you should as the finale looms) – please click here.

Tidbit: I stand corrected … the series does not end with volume 22. It continues with two more, under a slightly different title – 21st Century Boys! Guess they’re all grown up and ready for a new millennium! 21st Century #1 hits shelves late November, while #2 debuts mid-January 2013. See illuminating comments from “Anon” below for more information. Thanks indeed!

Readers: Young Adult, Adult

Published: 2012 (United States)
20 SEIKI SHONEN © Naoki Urasawa/Studio Nuts
Original Japanese edition published by Shogakukan Inc.

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Filed under ..Adult Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Fiction, .Graphic Novel/Manga/Manwha, .Translation, Japanese

20th Century Boys (vol. 20) by Naoki Urasawa, with the cooperation of Takashi Nagasaki, English adaptation by Akemi Wegmüller

Manga addict though I am, I DO try to keep manga posts spaced out, so I don’t look TOO panel-dependent (even though I am!). But right now, I can’t contain my effusive excitement over the latest volume of 20th Century Boys – which hit shelves yesterday! – because it’s one of the most heart-thumping in the series thus far! Clearly I’m not alone in my groupie devotion: the Boys won the Eisner Award (the Oscar of comics) for Best U.S. Edition of International Material – Asia in 2011.

Oh, holy moly, or I suppose that should be “Holy Mother”! As Yukiji, Otcho, Yoshitsune, and Kanna plot their next move against the Friend (and it’s major!), Yukiji insists that Kanna needs to finally see her “Holy Mother” Kiriko. So convinced is Yukiji about the needed reunion, she’s even managed to actually track Kiriko to a Japanese address … in a place called “Frogdoom.” Maruo heads over there to make first contact … where he finds childhood buddy Keroyon and the very best soba noodles ever. Really, it makes perfect sense!

Meanwhile, Kanna, Otcho, and Yukiji arrive at the Friend’s fortress, where an insider is waiting to get them through the checkpoints. Kanna gives her elders the slip, and confronts the Friend face-to-uh … head wrap bandage thing (see cover, ahem). Alien space ship, an invincible robot, bully twins gone straight (or not), a deathly race between fatal virus vs. humanity … who is going to win this round?

Once you open that first page, you won’t be able to stop until you’re forced to – what a bummer that back cover comes so soon! Then you’ll have a mad wait until June (for vol. 21) and August (for the finale – sniff, sniff – that will be vol. 22). Talk about testing my patience!

To check out all the previous volumes of 20th Century Boys (which you should) – please click here.

Readers: Young Adult, Adult

Published: 2012 (United States)
20 SEIKI SHONEN © Naoki Urasawa/Studio Nuts
Original Japanese edition published by Shogakukan Inc.

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20th Century Boys (vol. 19) by Naoki Urasawa, with the cooperation of Takashi Nagasaki, English adaptation by Akemi Wegmüller

Kanna, Otcho, and Manjome are all in the same room – you could say even on the same side. The final words from Manjome leave everyone speechless: “Please … kill him.”

Fast track north to the guitar-slinging stranger who calls himself Yabuki Joe who’s sharing fresh grilled fish riverside with police officer Chono. The pair end up in a bustling border town where the Kanto Army fortress looms and the great wall separates Tokyo from the rest of the world. The only way to get through the checkpoint is with a transit pass … but attempting to cross with a fake will get you killed.

Yabuki Joe and Chono get noticed by the border’s resident tough-guy cowboy named Ichi the Spade who introduces the twosome to a talented manga artist. Not only is he the forger who created the one transit pass that passed, but this manga-maker also turns out to be an old neighbor of Kanna’s.

While Yabuki Joe convinces him to start cranking out those passes (and promising him that manga can change the world), Ichi sells Chono back to the police. Not only does Yabuki Joe need to get those gates open for 200 anxious border refugees, but now he’s got some rescuing to do.

In the fortress awaits a decades-old trap of “pure evil” for our guitar hero. “It’s hard being evil. It’s a lot easier being the good guy,” our defender of justice intones.

Winner of the Eisner Award (the Oscar of comics) for Best U.S. Edition of International Material – Asia in 2011, 20th Century Boys remains an addictive favorite even after 19 volumes. A mere three more are forthcoming, and already I’m missing the rowdy gang. Surely I’ll be humming my made-up version of ”guta-rara … suda-rara” for many sleepless nights to come!

To catch up with all the previous volumes of 20th Century Boys – click here.

Readers: Young Adult, Adult

Published: 2012 (United States)
20 SEIKI SHONEN © Naoki Urasawa/Studio Nuts
Original Japanese edition published by Shogakukan Inc.

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Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World by Haruki Murakami, translated by Alfred Birnbaum

Chapter 1: an ultra high-tech building with an especially remarkable elevator (although without the usual, mundane details like floor buttons), loose change that suddenly doesn’t add up, a beautiful (chubby) young woman in everything pink who might have said “Proust” (or maybe “Truest? … Brew whist? … Blue is it? …”), and a lozenge-shaped electronic key that opens the door to <728>. Oh, and I can’t forget the flustered, lip-reading, Danny Boy-whistling, especially-good-with-tricky numbers, nameless protagonist. Your usual Haruki Murakami fare, right?

Chapter 2 (italics totally intentional): beasts sporting long golden fur – “[g]olden in the purest sense of the word, with not the least intrusion of another hue,” the horn-blowing Gatekeeper who herds the magnificent animals out through the right door of the West Gate every night and allows them re-entry in the morning, the local people who climb the Watchtower for just one spring week to watch the animals, and the newly arrived stranger-in-a-strange-land who is as yet unfamiliar with the seasonal rhythms of this unnamed walled-in world. Again, your usual Murakami fare.

Confused yet? No worries … Murakami has his recognizable tropes to give you just enough comfort: the somewhat slacker protagonist who is never quite surprised enough about the inexplicable events of his not-so-regular life, the teenage sidekick whose relationship with said protagonist brushes up against inappropriate but remains ultimately off-limits, the predictable messengers who either knock on/walk through/break down the front door, bedside books mostly written by dead white men, and hidden portals in and to the strangest places.

But lest you think you can ever just complacently read from page to page, Murakami will, of course, rock your world with his usual unexpected adventures. Jumping from odd to even chapters, you’ll track down a rogue scientist who can remove sound, feed a reference librarian with an insatiable culinary appetite, avoid the destructive path of the dynamic Junior/Big Boy duo, read dreams from animal skulls, search for anachronistic instruments in a land whose inhabitants cannot comprehend music, escape the INKlings through sewers and subways … and, as always, more, more, and more.

All the indescribable, unfathomable twists and turns that keep you addicted to Murakami … it’s all here in the hard-boiled wonderland of impossible equations and hunted skulls, and there at the end of the world with impenetrable walls and missing shadows.

Readers: Adult

Published: 1991 (United States)

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Filed under ..Adult Readers, .Audio, .Fiction, .Translation, Japanese

20th Century Boys (vol. 18) by Naoki Urasawa, with the cooperation of Takashi Nagasaki, English adaptation by Akemi Wegmüller

“Guta-rara … suda-rara” might sound like nonsense, but these lyrics belong to the music that quite possibly could save what’s left of the 21st-century world …

Otcho reunites with Kanna, only to find out that she’s the people’s Ice Queen. He tries to convince her to call off the August 20th uprising against the Friends because such rebellion will only bring certain death. “Every person I’ve ever loved is dead!!” she screams, “… This time, it’s my turn!” She was tricked into taking the vaccine that saved her life, but the cost of survival has literally left her ready to die.

Meanwhile, at the Northern border, an alien who calls himself Yabuki Joe has managed to walk through the heavily guarded gates. Surrounded by armed soldiers ready to annihilate him, he gets up after the first shot (!) and growls, “… when somebody’s singing a song … you can’t shoot them.”

“Guta-rara” becomes a rallying cry, and the already gathering mob of desperate villagers is ready to believe a Messiah has landed in their midst. They’re more than ready to obey and follow, if only to hear his next concert. While he rides off into the mysterious yonder toward “home,” Otcho and Kanna end up in front of the Friends’ top henchman Manjome, and nothing goes as expected …

“Guta-rara … suda-rara” … let the music play on … at least for another two months when vol. 19 is set to debut (on Valentine’s Day). Repeat after me: Patience is a virtue, patience is a virtue (and yes, I’ve already pre-ordered up to vol. 21!).

Don’t miss the previous volumes of 20th Century Boys – click here.

Readers: Young Adult, Adult

Published: 2011 (United States)
20 SEIKI SHONEN © Naoki Urasawa/Studio Nuts
Original Japanese edition published by Shogakukan Inc.

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Filed under ..Adult Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Fiction, .Graphic Novel/Manga/Manwha, .Translation, Japanese