March 7, 2010

The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya (Novel)

Filed under: Bookshelf — Tags: , , , , , , , , — Yukino @ 11:34 PM

My first taste of the wonderful world of Haruhi Suzumiya came just days after the first episode of the anime aired in Japan. I still had my anime store at the time, and some of my regular customers came to visit. They were excitedly talking about this crazy new anime they had found and told me I just had to watch it.

Twenty two minutes later I was in love.

In this first volume of nine currently available in Japan, our journey’s narrator Kyon begins recounting how Haruhi came to be a part of his high school life. Her class introduction announcing that she wished for any aliens, time travelers, sliders or ESPers to make themselves known to her certainly marked her as someone to avoid. Kyon couldn’t help himself though, and eventually during one of his attempts at conversation with her, she decides to start her own club:

Save the world by Overloading it with fun: Suzumiya Haruhi’s Brigade

aka SOS Brigade.

Haruhi sets out to create her club and cast the supporting roles, all while including the ever begrudging Kyon. He complains, but only to himself, as he soon learns whatever he says to Haruhi falls of deaf ears.

Rounding up Yuki Nagato, Mikuru Asahina and Koizumi Itsuki, the SOS Brigade comes together, taking over the defunct Literary Club’s room, “acquiring” a computer and really getting to know one another. More so in Kyon’s position than for anyone else, as Haruhi’s recruits each have something they need to share with him.

For myself, the best part of sinking my teeth into the novels means getting to enjoy the story in order, as the anime series pulls from the books in no particular order. For instance, the first season draws heavily from the first two books and the second jumps ahead further into book five. Reading the SOS Brigade’s adventures in the order intended by the author also has its benefits, as you can then place where in the time line you are as you follow the randomness of the anime version.

Commonly referred to as “light novels”, Haruhi Suzumiya’s tales generally span no more than seven chapters and are geared towards the sixteen and up crowd. This is a story told, after all, from the view of a man reflecting on his high school days, which means there is some content not really suited towards a younger crowd. For older readers (such as myself), many of Kyon’s observances towards the females in his group will have you smiling as some of these may remind you of your own high school days.

The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya is available now in paperback and can be purchased from RightStuf. You can also visit the official website for more on the manga and novel translations.

All You Need Is KILL

Keiji Kiriya doesn’t remember a time before the Mimics. The bloated, dead-frog looking creatures have come from a planet 40-some light years away in search of a new home for their race. Humanity, however, does not plan on giving them Earth so easily.

He’s only a recruit, can barely operate the heavy Jacket that soldiers are suited with on the battlefield. It’s his first real battle against the Mimics. On the battlefield, he damages one of them but not before they get him too.

Only to wake up and find himself repeating the same day over again.

Keiji is caught in a loop, reliving the same events every day. After a few days through the loop, he begins to train to become a better soldier. Most of the day to day events remain the same, but there are minor variances in most of them. Some of them he dies in the beginning of battle, others not.But with every loop, he becomes a stronger killing machine, Hell-bent on getting himself out of this loop.

In each of these loops, he sees the one woman slaughtering machine, Rita Vrataski, the Full Metal Bitch. She is one of the elite US Jacket jockeys, sent to Japan to help keep the technology of the country safe from the Mimics. Her Jacket is brilliant blood red and wields a giant battle axe, with which she has killed thousands of Mimics in order to defend humanity.

Once I began reading about Keiji’s struggle with the time loop I didn’t want to put it down. Sakurazaka-san does an amazing job at portraying each of the loops without going into each one individually. Keiji grows with each pass with the loop, fully aware of all the previous passes. The choices he’s made in each loop influence then next loop he will encounter. Watching Keiji grow from a rookie to a battle hardened soldier really kept me enjoying the story.

It’s not a long novel, barely 200 pages in length, but it is a good science fiction tale. I recommend it if you are looking for a short but enjoyable read.

Cover art by yoshitoshi ABe (Copyright Viz Media)

Find more Haikasoru titles on the official website

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Zoo

Truly one of the most enjoyable horror short story collections I have read in years, Otsuichi puts together fascinating tales of death that will horrify and shock you, yet you won’t be able to put the book down.

Beginning with the title story in which a young man receives a photograph of his missing girlfriend, I read through the stories in succession. After the third story I realized that death would play a major role in each of the tales I would encounter. Some are gruesome and bloody stories of murders based on pure hatred or psychosis, while others come from the eyes of innocent children.

One of the shorts, Song of the Sunny Spot, stands out from the others as the only story of death that is not as horrifying as the others. As the last man on earth getting ready to die, all he wants is a companion to take care of him and bury him, and so he builds an android. The nameless robot begins to evolve into more than what is expected of it and tries to understand what death is.

My other favourite stories are Kazari and Yoko, a tale of twin sisters, and SO-Far, in which a young boy tries to mend a broken home and becomes traumatized from the experience.

There was not one story that I did not read or find uninteresting. Not even the shortest story, a two page long tale of a child playing in a sandbox.

Zoo is a must-have collection for fans of the macabre.

Find more Haikasoru titles on the official website

Buy Zoo from Amazon or RightStuf

You can also check out the Zoo DVD (a collection of 4 live action and 1 anime short) available via RightStuf

*Review product was provided by Viz, and does not affect the outcome of this review.*

Artwork Copyright Viz Media

Usurper of the Sun

Aki Shiraishi was just a typical Japanese schoolgirl until the day of the eclipse. On that day, she was the first to document a strange tower on Mercury’s surface. From that moment on, her days in the school’s astronomy club and her future studies were completely focused on the Tower, who built it, why was it built, what is its purpose?

And then came the giant ring enveloping the Sun. This Ring has begun to grow so large that it is now impacting Earth. Less and less sunlight reaches the planet now. Entire countries have become uninhabitable. If something isn’t done soon, then it could mean the end of mankind.

Usurper of the Sun follows Aki as she sets out into space, witnessing the marvels of the Ring first hand. Here, she discovers that nanobots are maintaining the Ring, which appears to be a breaking system for a more technically advanced race set on a course into our galaxy. Aki and her peers continue to research these aliens, dubbed The Builders, hoping to one day make peaceful contact with them.

Housuke Nojiri’s space adventure will delight science fiction readers as it brings space travel, Artificial Intelligence, sciences and astronomy together. I admit heavy science fiction titles don’t tend to grab my attention often, but this one was definitely an exception. I desperately wanted to see Aki’s dream come true, to witness her success and her first exchange with the Builders. The journey is paved with many roadblocks, scientifically and politically, but the potential discoveries that a meeting between races could provide is worth every hurdle Aki faces.

Originally three short stories, Usurper of the Sun was bestowed the Seiun Award in 2002 for best Japanese science fiction when all three were published together.

Find more Haikasoru titles on the official website

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*Review product was provided by Viz, and does not affect the outcome of this review.*

Artwork Copyright Viz Media

The Sigh of Haruhi Suzumiya (Novel)

Filed under: Bookshelf — Tags: , , , , , , — Yukino @ 1:14 PM

How to make a movie Haruhi-style:

1) Procure a camera and props by forcing your friends to dress up in revealing costumes and hocking items they know nothing about

2) Don’t write down a single thing, that way no big shot Hollywood producers can steal your idea

3) Unknowingly make changes to the environment just by saying you want things a certain way

Its time for the school’s annual cultural festival, and Kyon and Haruhi’s class settle on doing a boring survey instead of something in the spirit of the event. Haruhi has other plans, and announces to the rest of the SOS Brigade that she has other plans. She wants to wow the attendees with a movie worthy of a Golden Globe.

Unfortunately for Kyon, Haruhi’s movie is affecting the world around them. If she wants cherry blossom in November, somehow it happens. A talking cat? No problem, at least, not for Haruhi.

But Haruhi’s wishes have the potential to ruin reality, and as Asahina, Yuki and Koizumi try to keep the effects secret from Haruhi, it is ultimately up to Kyon to set her straight before her whimsy takes over. Why is he the only person who can seem to get through to her?

The second light novel takes place about six months after the events of the SOS Brigade’s inception, and skips entirely over the absurd events that Haruhi subjected them to during the summer break, but there is a method to Kyon’s story-telling. Just like the first novel, I was totally engrossed from start to finish, regardless of the fact that I have already seen the catastrophe of Haruhi’s movie told in the anime version. I love Kyon struggling with his desire towards Asahina, his apprehension of Koizumi, and how he has become almost passive whenever strange events happen to the group. Add in the fact that Kyon is completely oblivious as to why Haruhi keeps him around and you will find yourself smiling as I do when he gripes about her.

Now I wait impatiently for The Boredom of Haruhi Suzumiya to be released in July, when Kyon decides to regale us with the story of what happened that summer. I wish they had begun publishing the translations sooner as book four, The Disappearance of Haruhi Suzumiya, will be released as a movie in Japan on Feb 10, 2010.

The Sigh of Haruhi Suzumiya is responsible for some of the episodes from season 1 and season 2 of the Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya anime.

Join the official website for Haruhi Suzumiya or purchase The Sigh of Haruhi Suzumiya (available on Amazon or RightStuf) and get caught up before the third book launches this summer.

And Another Thing

It’s no simple task to take up your pen and attempt to create a story worthy of the hoopiest frood in all of existence. But when asked to do so, Eoin Colfer shows us that he has the kroompst (“Kroompst!”) to do just that.

Once again, and for the last time, the Vogons have destroyed Earth. In every dimension, in every version of space, time and improbability, Prostetnic Vogon Jeltz has made sure that humanity has been wiped clean from its ZZ Plural Z Alpha address so that it never interferes with the hyperspace bypass.

He has not, however, killed all the humans, as was part of the initial contract.

Arthur Dent, Trillian, and their daughter Random, are still mucking about the galaxy. There are also reports that Zaphod Beeblebrox purchased and sold a Magrathean made planet to some Earthlings. Knowing they are out there, Jeltz, his crew and his son (who is going through a bit of an un-Vogon like identity crisis) are about to seek out and destroy the remaining humans.

Our ragtag group of intergalactic travelers and ex-President of the Galaxy are saved just in the nick of time from the destruction of the last existing version of Earth by none other than Wowbagger, the rudest alien in the universe. In exchange for safe passage, Wowbagger demands that they kill him. He no longer wants to be immortal, spending his years hopping planet to planet insulting everyone.

Mr. Colfer brought characters back to life that I missed dearly. The tension between the universe’s most dysfunctional family is one that I love (I’ve read the Triology in Five Parts probably ten times) and it was nice to see how he solved the problem child’s issues with her parents. The only thing that was missing was Marvin, but I suppose you can’t bring everyone back.

Arthur’s fixation with the missing Fenchurch did wear a bit thin for me. As did the Guide entries which seemed to be on every other page. Some of the Guide entries that were included I felt didn’t need to be there. But that’s just me. As a huge fan of the original work, you won’t please us all 100%. And we can’t expect him to channel our revered Mr. Adams. Well, we could, but that’s just not fair.

While I was not pleased with everything that happened in And Another Thing, I was happy with my overall experience. Sure, there are things I would have changed and outcomes I wasn’t too happy with, but I didn’t write it. You have to give credit where credit is due. Eoin Colfer honoured the memory of Douglas Adams with a fantastical tale, gave us a new drink to attempt Earthly re-creation of, and added another chapter where no one else did. The book now sits proudly beside my well loved and well read copy of the original works, waiting for me to re-read the series again.

And somewhere in the universe, Thor waits for his own novel.

Purchase And Another Thing in paperback from Amazon

Lord of the Sands of Time

In the future, mankind no longer lives on Earth. In the future, we create AI with bodies similar to our own and send them back in time in hopes of stopping the alien invasion before it spreads and destroys us all.

Orville is one of these Messengers. He is one of many Messengers who will travel across the time streams in hopes that he can help humanity survive and remain on Earth. His relationship with a human is what fuels him as he leaps across time, hoping that he can at least save her ancestors and save the possibility that in one time stream she might at least survive.

When Orville arrives in 248 BC Japan, he finds a leader who will heed his instruction and lead forces against the intruders. She is Miyo, Shaman Queen of Wa, a young leader who has never truly led her people before, but finds the strength within herself to do so. With a little bit of meddling, Orville helps Miyo’s people learn about new weaponry with which they can kill the enemy (referred to as mononoke throughout the book, a term for demons in Japanese).

Another great story from one of Japan’s best science fiction authors, Lord of the Sands of Time was a wonderful look into AI/human relations and human/human relationships and the idealism of humanity. Orville spends much of his time thinking about how he can be loyal to the humans, and just what it means to be human. His interactions with humans over the various time periods he visits have not always been the best, yet he continues to fight for us.

Issui Ogawa is one of the most acclaimed science fiction authors in Japan and is a member of the Space Authors Club. He’s won 2 Seiun Awards for his works; the 35th Award for The Sixth Continent and the 37th for a collection of short stories.

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Cover art copyright Viz Media

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