shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Nov 22, 2016 21:11:23 GMT -5
Usagi Yojimbo is the story of a wandering ronin (masterless samurai) undertaking The Warrior's Pilgrimage in search of inner harmony in the wake of his master's death. Along the way he's protected the innocent, met allies, made enemies, and become caught up in sweeping epics upon which the fate of all Japan rested. Usagi is the kind of quality work that transcends genres, demographics, and even age groups. It crafts a delicate and beautiful balance between honor and savagery, cute innocence and dark brutality, simple heart-warming stories and multi-part epics that shape a dense continuity. Whether or not you've ever been a fan of feudal Japanese culture, furry anthro characters, or independent, non-superhero comics, Usagi Yojimbo is a saga that can't help but impress even the harshest critic. --- "I think Usagi Yojimbo is one of the most original, innovative, well-executed comicbooks anywhere to be found. Stan's style of artwork, his crisp incisive writing, and his throughly professional pacing, all done in a relaxed and absorbed manner, have provided comics with something so rarely seen in this field--a new literary and artistic approach to illustrated storytelling."
-- Stan Lee, 1988
"As a storyteller, Stan Sakai is one of the few artists working in comics who completely understands his medium. In keeping with the comic book's serialized format that is presented to the public on a periodical basis, Stan writes each installment of Usagi Yojimbo as a tapestry that moves the characters and their relationship forward. And occasionally...embarking on a larger, pivotal story-arc which will propel the hero and the story through the chosen gateway and toward its destined path.
For us readers, since we are not bound to stay behind with the villagers, it is to our benefit, as well as our pleasure, to follow Usagi down that road."
-- Jeff Smith, 1994
"...The book is masterfully written. Always fresh, with compelling characters and with a sense of authenticity. And the plots keep coming. Just when you fear you've seen it all, Stan comes up with some new twist on samurai themes or avenue of experience for Usagi, and we're on unfamiliar, fresh ground. The book is solid, well-crafted, imaginative storytelling. Classic storytelling."
-- James Robinson, 1998
"You're gonna love 'em. That's all you need to know."
-- Kurt Busiek, 1998
"This is an important event in the progress of this medium because Stan Sakai has successfully brought to American comics a collection of Japanese fables well told in the American style. He has a good control of sequential art, and his compositions have the ability to create powerful understatements.
Usagi Yojimbo is an enduring work. Bravo."
-- Will Eisner, 1999
"It's the mark of a great storyteller. It's the stuff of legends."
-- Paul Dini, 2001
"...Sakai teases out themes in word and image that first propel the narrative, then move the heart. His language, both in text and image, is succinct, deft, and ever precise.
Nothing in these pages is wasted."
-- Greg Rucka, 2001
"Many people have noted the recent publication of the three hundredth and final issue of Dave Sim's Cerebus comic as a significant event in the history of comics, and it certainly is--anyone who has ever tried to do one issue of a comic, let alone three hundred, can grasp at least part of that significance. But I think it can be argued--even though, given the very different nature of the two comics, it is sort of like comparing apples to oranges--that Stan's accomplishment with Usagi over the last twenty years and into the future is perhaps even more significant. And Stan has--except for the efforts of his cover colorist and publishers, which, while not inconsequential, are surely in the final analysis relatively small--done it all himself. He has--by himself, no background artist or cowriter, etc.--written, pencilled, inked, and lettered all 130-plus issues of Usagi to date. That simply boggles the mind."
-- Peter Laird, 2004
"And just because Usagi features a talking bunny, don't be fooled into thinking this is only a book for kids (though it's one of the few comics out there that I'll happily share with my young nephew). The stories are sophisticated, thrilling, hilarious, and heartbreaking, not in spite of the furry creatures, but because of them."
-- Brian K. Vaughan, 2009
"Stan never wastes a panel; he never throws away a moment or a word balloon, and his stories are fashioned with craft, care, devotion, and a deep respect for history."
-- Walt Simonson, 2012
"The details of culture and history are finely researched. Every frame has the look and smell of reality. This specificity of detail in customs and time transforms our rabbit into a very human animal...Usagi Yojimbo becomes as timeless and as mythic as the lone good guy roaming the Wild West or Sherwood Forest, coming to the aid of the oppressed. The "ronin" rabbit's stories become universal."
-- George Takei, 2014
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Post by brutalis on Nov 23, 2016 9:07:11 GMT -5
Funny that i find this new posting from you today Shaxper. As yesterday after reading through some of the other Usagi posts at lunch i decided to renew my reading of the Ronin Rabbit. I had collected early Usagi back in the days along with Cerebus and over time and school and living and financial struggles had been forced to drop both series. With multiple moves i lost track of my Usagi floppies (still have Cerebus, need to finish that series collection) and they are lost in the void somewhere as i think those boxes were in a storage shed that i ended up losing many years ago.
So yesterday afternoon i ordered me up some TPB's off Amazon and await their arrival after Thanksgiving to begin anew my travels with Usagi. Looking forward to catching up with an old friend and know i have a grand adventure ahead of me. Now if i can only pace myself in ordering from Amazon as i still have my Elfquest, Palomar, Cadillac and Dinosaurs TPB's on the shelf all bought up this last year to begin reading.
Keep telling myself this addiction of mine is better than other's because i derive more lasting pleasure from it and don't end up sick from overindulgence or going broke (okay, maybe a little poorer but i do limit my purchases each month) and losing the house and car:D
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Nov 23, 2016 9:21:41 GMT -5
Definitely looking forward to your thoughts here as you play catch-up, brutalis. The beauty of having art as your addiction is that it not only does no harm; it enhances your perceptions of yourself and the world. Usagi certainly does that for me
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Post by brutalis on Nov 29, 2016 8:47:43 GMT -5
Rather than clog up the site with my thoughts in the individual issue posts i shall endeavor to inspire you all to follow the Ronin Rabbit's exploits with my insights of Usagi and his world from my return to reading this engaging series.
Beginning with the writing of Stan Sakai you can see that he has become a consummate storyteller who knows when the writing can explain or show more than the art. His writing of the characters all has a flow and rhythm from them which is able to be read naturally in the series, not detracting from the art or even overwhelming it (yes, some do write too much Mr. Claremont) but enhancing every story with an ease that Sakai probably works very hard at to create. The writing is so well done that in my head i can "hear" the voices very clearly even if they are of my own imagining. Usagi carrying a calm and detached intonation in most of his words, Gen the gruff, loud friendly (if slightly overbearing) personality, Mariko the soft lonely voice of a lost eternal love yet gratefully acknowledgement of the honor and nobility Usagi carries. Tomoe's youthful hearts hopes and desires held in strong control in her role to the young emperor. All speaking to the strength of Sakai's writing skills that you learn to care about these comic book characters and their lives and actions as though they are truly alive and in your life. These are friends and villains we all know or have met or come across in our own personal adventures s we grow and live our lives. They enrich, show, teach and entertain us with their every breath. That is the mark of a great writer.
The artwork. Oh the artwork. From the very 1st panel of Usagi crunching through the snow hunched over in attempting to stay warm as he approaches a lone home in the dark woods of the mountains as the moon glows brightly overhead you know you have entered a beautiful new world. Yet it is instantly recognizable this world, one which speaks of and evokes and resembles Japan in it's style and textures in our minds. To so immediately provide us this feeling of Japan in the subtle, simple lines on the page requires skill and much thought as to what to put in and what to leave out. Sakai excels at this through every story and even becomes stronger in his ability to show us a world we know yet do not truly know much about.
There is a soothing, tranquil essence in traveling along with Usagi as his world reminds us of our own yet instills us with hope our own lives might better reflect his yet it is his worlds reflection of ours that we are learning and growing with every issue and step this wandering honorable soulful warrior takes.
There are 2 favorite panels of Usagi which i truly admire and wish i had the original's of. 1st is the final story panel with Usagi at night standing and looking up through the night sky at the moon. The simple peaceful quiet moment of a warrior in contemplation. Who if not all of us hasn't stood in the middle of the night with a pure moment of thought and emotion gazing upon the moonlit starry sky pondering? My 2nd is an opening full page with Usagi striding forth across a grassy plain accompanied by dragonflies with the windswept clouds blowing along overhead in the same direction. Each of us carried along by the winds of fate to wander through life even as Usagi does, sometimes knowing where we are going and at other times places unknown beckoning us ever forward. Stan Sakai is a true poet in his artwork being capable of speaking to us with eloquence and elegance with not a word needing to be written.
The characters which populate the world of Usagi Yojimbo are not strangers to us. They are all people we know. From the boisterous begrudging genuine giving and taking friendship of Gen to the blind Ino who is only lost for his unwillingness to let go of his own vanity and preconceived notions so that he might find the peace and tranquility he seeks. The ninja master Shingen whom is at 1st seemingly yet another evil villain to fight only with time becoming a compatriot showing his own honor and courage and strength of belief in his dying breath. The ache of a lost love in Mariko and a child you can only dream of ever knowing or having whose love is always with you nonetheless wherever you travel. All of them and others being a part of Usagi's life and by the reading of their stories becoming a part of our life.
This is why you need to be reading Usagi. It is a story of life. To be experienced, to be savored and to recognize ourselves in the context of a hobby that enhances our own being.
And it is a Samurai Rabbit for crying out loud! Why aren't you reading this exquisite series already? Quit putting it off and delve deeply into the glorious world which awaits you...
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Nov 29, 2016 10:28:26 GMT -5
Rather than clog up the site with my thoughts in the individual issue posts We do have an entire section for that, you know But excellent synopsis of the series. Again, I'm so glad you've gone back and are enjoying it all over again!
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Post by brutalis on Nov 29, 2016 10:50:41 GMT -5
Rather than clog up the site with my thoughts in the individual issue posts We do have an entire section for that, you know But excellent synopsis of the series. Again, I'm so glad you've gone back and are enjoying it all over again! Oh i know Shax, i thought about going in and doing individual notes to each issues posting but with the insanity of the holiday's in full assault and the work woes it delivers me i just didn't think i have the time and energy to giving proper attention to all the Usagi goodness. Every issue there is something to be found and explored and enjoyed. I haven't quite figured out why there aren't more people reading and talking about Usagi, Elfquest, Disney, Archie and their ilk. Considering how repetitive and disillusioning the BIG 2 are in recent years i have found myself searching out the alternative pleasures to be found in the comic book world. I like fun in my comic reading. I can bury myself into days of reading any of the above mentioned collections yet i can only read a few Marvel/DC at a time unless they are issues from the olden days of my youth.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Nov 29, 2016 10:58:23 GMT -5
I haven't quite figured out why there aren't more people reading and talking about Usagi, Elfquest, Disney, Archie and their ilk. Considering how repetitive and disillusioning the BIG 2 are in recent years i have found myself searching out the alternative pleasures to be found in the comic book world. Stigma and little else, I think. My two favorite pulls right now are Usagi and Mickey Mouse (when it has a "Casty" story in it), and my favorite run in the past ten years was Life with Archie: The Married Life. So much quality, depth, artistry, and fun to be found in each of these, but they aren't superheroes, so few people take notice.
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Post by brutalis on Nov 29, 2016 11:09:59 GMT -5
Adored Archie: the Married Life and how true to the characters it was while updating and moving them forward into young adult hood. One if my best pleasures at the moment is with each new Archie 1000 page giant i order and receive from Amazon. Mickey Mouse has been wonderful. I get each new Uncle Scrooge and Walt Disney's Stories as both carry a variety of fun every issue. Darkwing Duck is superb and funny and captures what is great about comic books. Each month i grab the newest Elfquest in support of the Pini's (have met and talked with them at Phoenix Comicon several times) and i am ordering each collected TPB as they come out. I could walk away from superhero stuff anymore and simply enjoy what i have collected quite easily yet there are still a few individual series to read. Can't recommend Powerman and Iron Fist enough or Hanna Barbera Future Quest as standouts of superhero adventures.
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Post by Icctrombone on Nov 29, 2016 23:07:02 GMT -5
Shax, you picked a winner here. UY is good stuff and I'm looking forward to reading the large volume I picked up a while ago. I love the Rhino guy.
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Post by brutalis on Nov 30, 2016 7:57:28 GMT -5
I have 2 friends who when combining both their personalities they create my own Gen. One a best bud since high school who started off a bit of a bully that i stood up to and from their a true friendship grew that many could never understand how we tolerated each other (complete opposites in a way: he being overbearing and loud and sports minded, me the rather quiet intelligent geek) but our differences were all placed aside in the common things we shared and liked. The 2nd friend i met here through work at the hospital and again he is a boisterously loud and annoying to some but our likes and interests in many things drew us together in friendship. Both now are my brothers in a sense and i am closer to each of them than my own real brothers.
With Usagi and Gen it is seen time and again that they begrudgingly admire and respect one another even though at times they seemingly drive each other crazy. Both get something from the other that they miss in their solo wanderings and while Gen can be gruff, annoying, loud and in general a rather large horned pain in the butt he has time and again proven and shown his true friendship to Usagi. Gen brings out those hidden and clamped down aspects Usagi would normally keep to himself and therefore allowing Usagi to laugh, play and compete against/with Gen in a brotherly competitive yet loving way he may not usually let himself normally show.
All this makes Gen and Usagi's friendship and so real to me at least..
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Nov 30, 2016 8:11:25 GMT -5
I suspect we all have a Gen in our lives (or, if you're lucky, two ). I'm still always a little sad when Stan clarifies that Gen thinks he's Usagi's best friend. I adore Tomoe and want her and Usagi to end up together, but I still feel Usagi has a greater bond with Gen because they challenge each other's sensibilities towards greater self-awareness/contentment. Usagi needs to learn to relax and wander off the path more, and Gen needs to be reminded of honor, duty, and obligation.
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Post by wildfire2099 on Nov 30, 2016 12:56:26 GMT -5
I suspect we all have a Gen in our lives (or, if you're lucky, two ). I'm still always a little sad when Stan clarifies that Gen thinks he's Usagi's best friend. I adore Tomoe and want her and Usagi to end up together, but I still feel Usagi has a greater bond with Gen because they challenge each other's sensibilities towards greater self-awareness/contentment. Usagi needs to learn to relax and wander off the path more, and Gen needs to be reminded of honor, duty, and obligation. As the kids say, I 'ship Usagi more with Kitsune, but I know you don't. I'd rather Tomoe just be his friend. Tomoe is a great character, but is too like Usagi to make a good match with him, IMO.
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Post by brutalis on Nov 30, 2016 13:17:46 GMT -5
I suspect we all have a Gen in our lives (or, if you're lucky, two ). I'm still always a little sad when Stan clarifies that Gen thinks he's Usagi's best friend. I adore Tomoe and want her and Usagi to end up together, but I still feel Usagi has a greater bond with Gen because they challenge each other's sensibilities towards greater self-awareness/contentment. Usagi needs to learn to relax and wander off the path more, and Gen needs to be reminded of honor, duty, and obligation. I think though that we have all had someone in our lives who believes we are their bestest friend ever when the actuality is perhaps more closely they are a slight addition to or either tolerate them being in our circle of friends. I can see though where Stan's idea is that Gen himself believes Usagi is his best (only?!?) friend simply due to Usagi willingly continues to associate and interact with him. To Gen that means friendship where to Usagi it may only mean he understands the loneliness of a fellow wanderer while seeing beyond the gruff exterior to the inner honor and courage and begrudgingly will do his best to tolerate Gen in hopes of bringing out those better qualities. I once had several of those in my life and eventually because they refused to be better and continued embracing their worse qualities i had to make a decision and excise them from my life as they only hurt me or those around me and even brought out the worst in myself from my interactions with them.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Nov 30, 2016 13:59:30 GMT -5
I suspect we all have a Gen in our lives (or, if you're lucky, two ). I'm still always a little sad when Stan clarifies that Gen thinks he's Usagi's best friend. I adore Tomoe and want her and Usagi to end up together, but I still feel Usagi has a greater bond with Gen because they challenge each other's sensibilities towards greater self-awareness/contentment. Usagi needs to learn to relax and wander off the path more, and Gen needs to be reminded of honor, duty, and obligation. I think though that we have all had someone in our lives who believes we are their bestest friend ever when the actuality is perhaps more closely they are a slight addition to or either tolerate them being in our circle of friends. I can see though where Stan's idea is that Gen himself believes Usagi is his best (only?!?) friend simply due to Usagi willingly continues to associate and interact with him. To Gen that means friendship where to Usagi it may only mean he understands the loneliness of a fellow wanderer while seeing beyond the gruff exterior to the inner honor and courage and begrudgingly will do his best to tolerate Gen in hopes of bringing out those better qualities. I once had several of those in my life and eventually because they refused to be better and continued embracing their worse qualities i had to make a decision and excise them from my life as they only hurt me or those around me and even brought out the worst in myself from my interactions with them. And yet there have been moments where Gen has been the better friend, as well as the wiser of the two. Not a regular occurrence, of course, but Gen has had his moments.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Nov 30, 2016 14:05:09 GMT -5
I suspect we all have a Gen in our lives (or, if you're lucky, two ). I'm still always a little sad when Stan clarifies that Gen thinks he's Usagi's best friend. I adore Tomoe and want her and Usagi to end up together, but I still feel Usagi has a greater bond with Gen because they challenge each other's sensibilities towards greater self-awareness/contentment. Usagi needs to learn to relax and wander off the path more, and Gen needs to be reminded of honor, duty, and obligation. As the kids say, I 'ship Usagi more with Kitsune, but I know you don't. I'd rather Tomoe just be his friend. Tomoe is a great character, but is too like Usagi to make a good match with him, IMO. I think it was stillpoint who recently pointed out that Kitsune is far better suited to Gen. Of course, by your rationale, maybe that's exactly why she should be with Usagi -- opposites attract. At the risk of oversimplifying and vasty underrating the characters, Tomoe is the female counterpart to Usagi while Kitsune is the female counterpart to Gen. Not as sure where Chizu fits into all that.
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