Immagine dell'autore.

Akimi Yoshida

Autore di Banana Fish, Volume 1

100 opere 2,625 membri 25 recensioni 5 preferito

Sull'Autore

Fonte dell'immagine: via myanimelist.net

Serie

Opere di Akimi Yoshida

Banana Fish, Volume 1 (2004) 326 copie
Banana Fish, Volume 2 (2004) 199 copie
Banana Fish, Volume 3 (1999) 178 copie
Banana Fish, Volume 4 (2004) 153 copie
Banana Fish, Volume 5 (2002) 138 copie
Banana Fish, Volume 7 (2002) 131 copie
Banana Fish, Volume 6 (2002) 123 copie
Banana Fish, Volume 12 (1991) 97 copie
Banana Fish, Volume 11 (1990) 97 copie
Banana Fish, Volume 8 (1736) 96 copie
Banana Fish, Volume 9 (1989) 93 copie
Banana Fish, Volume 19 (1994) 92 copie
Banana Fish, Volume 10 (1990) 91 copie
Banana Fish, Volume 13 (1991) 91 copie
Banana Fish, Volume 15 (1992) 91 copie
Banana Fish, Volume 18 (1994) 89 copie
Banana Fish, Volume 14 (1992) 85 copie
Banana Fish, Volume 17 (1993) 84 copie
Banana Fish, Volume 16 (1993) 82 copie
Yasha, Volume 1 (1996) 9 copie
Yasha, Volume 7 (2000) 8 copie
Yasha, Volume 8 (2000) 8 copie
Yasha, Volume 6 (1999) 8 copie
Yasha, Volume 10 (2001) 8 copie
Yasha 09 (2001) 7 copie
Yasha, Volume 3 (1997) 7 copie
Yasha, Volume 4 (1998) 7 copie
Yasha, Volume 5 (1999) 7 copie
Yasha, Volume 12 (2002) 7 copie
Yasha, Volume 2 (1997) 6 copie
Yasha 11 (2002) 6 copie
Double Helix (2003) 4 copie
Sakura no Sono (1994) 3 copie
Kissho Tennyo 02 (1984) 2 copie
Kissho Tennyo 04 (1984) 2 copie
Kissho Tennyo 01 (1983) 2 copie
Kissho Tennyo 03 (1984) 1 copia
Banana Fish 1 copia
桜の園 (Jets comics) (1986) 1 copia

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Nome canonico
Yoshida, Akimi
Altri nomi
吉田 秋生
Data di nascita
1956-08-12
Sesso
female
Nazionalità
Japan
Istruzione
Musashino Art University

Utenti

Recensioni

Año 1973, Vietnam. Un soldado pierde los papeles tras musitar las palabras “Banana Fish”... Año 1985, Nueva York. Ash intenta averiguar qué hay detrás de esas palabras, tras las cuales parece cernirse la oscura sombra de Papa Dino, un capo mafioso de los bajos fondos.
 
Segnalato
bibliotecayamaguchi | Oct 6, 2023 |
Unfortunately I lack the proper historical perspective to appreciate this series for its place in shoujo/queer comics history, so if you want that, look elsewhere, since I know a lot has been written about this series by people smarter than me who have that context. While I will not be doing this series the justice it deserves without that perspective, what I can say is, for me: it's fine enough for organized crime queer comics from the 80s. I'm also biased in that I find organized crime media rather boring, but I enjoyed the anime adaptation well enough, so. The variety of character designs is pretty neat, and the way it shows cops is well... accurate to my understanding of cop-centric media at the time, toeing the line between sympathetic to the poor and marginalized and also sympathetic to cops who are I guess just doing whatever cops are supposed to be doing (while noting they're kind of incompetent and gross). The story is very 80s America, and that works quite well. The main drug plotline isn't all that fascinating, but I am biased in that I've seen a lot of stories about drug wars, gang violence, and the horrors faced by veterans. But I do still find Ash/Eiji compelling, even in their brief interactions here. Ash is still a wonderful character.

Since this story actually came out in the 80s and is intended to be ABOUT the 80s, it works well enough, rather than the beautifully done and more visually enjoyable anime adaptation that also kind of Frankenstein-monster'd its way to modernization while still attempting to retain the aesthetic/culture of 80s America, which truly doesn't work. The story here just doesn't work as is but set in 2016. But here, it's fine. If you combine the visuals of the anime with the story here, you get something solid between them. And that's not to say the art is bad here, because it is rather good (even if I don't care for how Eiji is drawn, and the way the manga sometimes does bad stereotype art for black people), but the anime does have much better art mostly. The plots that were good in the anime come right from here, including Ash letting Eiji touch his gun, and Eiji vaulting over a wall and getting injured, and Ash being deeply impressed by him, so there's that.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
AnonR | 4 altre recensioni | Aug 5, 2023 |
This volume is much better than volume 1. The story and character stuff is much stronger. There's a lot of moving parts in the plot, and while I still don't particularly find the actual banana fish part of the plot all that interesting, the character interactions more than make up for it. It also outright shows just how corrupt and awful cops are, and how much of a farce interrogations can be, as well as how evil US prisons and prison guards can be.

That being said, the stuff with Eiji getting everyone caught is still kind of silly. Admittedly it's realistic in the sense that Eiji has no idea what he's doing, and Ash has no options, but Eiji weirdly showing up to the undercover thing dressed like a magazine model for no apparent reason (unless he's playing into the idea that this is like a movie?) and predictably screwing everything up is still not a fun plot. I do enjoy his and Ash's relationship developing, though. And Eiji's relationship with Ibe is lovely.

The depiction of child sex trafficking is well-done, and I think people prevaricating over it have no experience in how this stuff works. The story is attempting to - at least on some level - be a realistic depiction of this era and particularly children and how they're treated by organized crime and people in power, particularly white cis men. It does a pretty decent job of that. It's not surprise the cops are acting like this (though of course we have the "good" cops). I do agree that Skip's death is... complicated at best in the sense that the story doesn't have any major black characters outside of Skip (at least until Cain, but outside him, I think that's about it, and he's not in the story yet). All the black characters are extras. It's still focused on people of color and their struggles (I mean Eiji is Japanese, Shorter is Chinese), but it does treat violence against black people as more typical and unavoidable than it does with other people of color. Black characters here are collateral damage. Yes, they can help give white characters justification for murder, but they don't end well (unless you're that one prison guard, I guess). And while the story is still about people of color... it's just interesting on who is allowed to walk away from it, and who isn't.

All in all, this is a very good volume, and I say that as someone who generally doesn't like organized crime stories, or stories about cops. If you're considering dropping after volume 1, I highly recommend waiting until you get through volume 2.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
AnonR | Aug 5, 2023 |
The story is kind of boring, though the art is improving.
 
Segnalato
AnonR | 1 altra recensione | Aug 5, 2023 |

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Statistiche

Opere
100
Utenti
2,625
Popolarità
#9,781
Voto
4.2
Recensioni
25
ISBN
197
Lingue
7
Preferito da
5

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