Forum - View topicNEWS: Gou Tanabe Launches New H.P Lovecraft Manga Adapting The Shadow Over Innsmouth Story
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dm
Subscriber
Posts: 1480 |
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I've always found the treatments of the Cthulu mythos by people who came after Lovecraft to be more interesting than Lovecraft's works themselves, but I've been meaning to check out Tanabe's work. There seems to be an active Lovecraft following in Japan --- I've seen several collections of original short stories from Japan.
Ruthanna Emrys has a series of novels, beginning with A winter tide, that retells the story of Innsmouth from the perspective of the residents. The narrator is one of the last survivors, after the government forcibly removed the population to internment camps that were later repurposed for Japanese Americans during WWII. ... And, of course ANN's own "House of a thousand manga" Jason Thompson had his own graphic novel treatments of Lovecraft's The dream quest of the unknown Kadath. Re: Lovecraft in Japan (Ken Asamatsu?, really?): https://lovecraftzine.com/2013/01/09/the-cthulhu-mythos-in-japan/ |
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vanfanel
Posts: 1261 |
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Not the "Love Hina" guy, if that's what you're thinking; that's Ken Akamatsu. A couple of Asamatsu's Lovecraftian books are available in translation. When I searched on his name, I got a mixture of Mythos and Love Hina results, though . |
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Shaterri
Posts: 173 |
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Wait, that was this Jason Thompson? I've always been amazed by the graphic design in that version and how it manages to make its style work so well; super cool! Meanwhile, I have to say that I'm curious but also dreading this a little bit. The Shadow Over Innsmouth is one of Lovecraft's most problematic works, and given the historical and ongoing issues with depictions of race in manga and anime, this feels like a potential recipe for some deeply painful and cringeworthy work. |
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