Forum - View topicREVIEW: A Drifting Life GN
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Moomintroll
Posts: 1600 Location: Nottingham (UK) |
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This is a pretty good review of a fascinating and important book but - and I dare say this is ANN's fault rather than Casey's - why on Earth is it only being reviewed now, in July?
This book made a huge splash and was one of the most heralded, talked about literary comic releases around...back in April. It got a huge amount of coverage in both the comics and mainstream press around the English speaking world (everything from radio shows to an extensive write-up on the front page of the New York Times art supplement). Tatsumi, along with Adrian Tomine, appeared at various North American events to promote the book and gave numerous interviews, a bajillion reviews appeared online and many more in print in broadsheet newspapers from LA to London and there was discussion of the title pretty much wherever you looked on sites dealing with this sort of thing, including right here on the ANN manga board. So why has ANN waited four months to get this review out? It would have been nice to hear what Casey had to say before, or as, the book hit the street. At the very least it would have been nice to read this review with the book still fairly fresh in my mind. Seems to me like more reviewers are required here to help pick up the slack and keep things somewhat fresh and timely. Compounding ANN's zeitgeist dodging, this still hasn't even got an encyclopedia entry, despite having been mentioned in numerous news stories over the past year or two. Surely some things merit being bumped up the waiting list? ---
I had originally thought that Tatsumi's decision to change his name (and those of many other characters) was an attempt to give him as an author some emotional distance from the narrative but according to this interview from the Toronto Comic Arts Festival his reasons had more to do with "plausible deniability" and Japanese literary tradition:
In any case, I don't think Tatsumi's decision to give himself a pseudonym indicates that his character has been "semi-fictionalised" or that anything substantive has been altered.
I'm glad you think Tatsumi's works qualify but why on Earth does a book (or anything else for that matter) have to be vitally culturally important in order to be attractively presented and have high production values? That should be the norm all publishers strive for rather than something excessive reserved for unimpeachable cultural artefacts because, you know, nice things are, well, nice... The Tokyopop standard is the level of mediocrity we should praise publishers for rising above, not some kind of baseline to actually aim for. We've had this now from Casey (Dororo), Carlo (Black Jack) and even Theron (Black Lagoon) - they've all counter-intuitively complained that a manga has production values that are too high. What is this? Nobody ever complains that DVD releases have too many extras or too nice a box. Is it OCD because not every book on their shelves is 7.5 x 5"? Is it inverted snobbery? Or maybe fanboy (/girl) status anxiety stemming from the delineations between manga and other comic markets getting blurred and thus robbing their cosy otaku club of some of its exclusivity? Or is it just code for "this costs more than $9.99"? If so, I wish they'd just say so. --- Anyway, now that I've finished ranting, this really is a one-of-a-kind book and ought to be required reading for anybody with an interest in gekiga / underground manga in particular and the history of the comics form more generally. It isn't actually quite as good as any of the other three Tatsumi books D&Q have put out but then very few things are and all those "A"s Casey gave it are well deserved. Go buy it. |
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Generic #757858
Posts: 1354 |
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Yeah, I've been noticing this too. Personally, I've no problem forking out the necessary cash for a quality product and always opt to go for the special editions and such, so it sounds really odd to me to complain about it. Heck, apart from the occasional dryness of the storytelling, the only complaint I have about A Drifting Life is that D&Q didn't give it the high quality hardback treatment of the other Tatsumi books. But otherwise I agree with Casey. It's a fascinating read for the historical perspective and insight into the development of manga and gekiga, but on a more personal level it can be somewhat dry, monotonous and lacking in emotional punch (but such is life, eh?). |
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fuuma_monou
Posts: 1857 Location: Quezon City, Philippines |
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Backlog was the reason cited last time a review was tagged as months behind the release date. I wondered how Otaku USA managed to print some reviews ahead of ANN when you'd think a website would have the edge in timeliness over a bimonthly magazine. Could be the availability of review copies. |
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Generic #757858
Posts: 1354 |
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Meh, this happens so often that it has stopped bothering me. I always enjoy reading ANN reviews, but timeliness just isn't one of their strongpoints. |
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bleuster
Posts: 455 Location: Orange County |
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Well, better late than never, right?!
I adore and cherish his yearly collections that were published in the past few years. It's great for the enthusiastic as well casual fans of manga and comics in genera because you are seeing a bit a of untold history. I'd even recommend them to people who are not familiar with these types of books to give it a try. |
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Zac
ANN Executive Editor
Posts: 7912 Location: Anime News Network Technodrome |
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While I'll cop to the fact that our reviews are sometimes not too fresh, this has a lot to do with that. I'll definitely make timeliness more of a focus in the future, though; thanks for your feedback. |
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Chinatsu
Posts: 17 |
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My art Teacher let me borrow the book since I'm a gekiga fan. By the time I finished it all I felt like drawing. Drifting Life is truly one of those books of the year.
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