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The Drifting Classroom, Vol. 1 (1) di Kazuo…
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The Drifting Classroom, Vol. 1 (1) (edizione 2006)

di Kazuo Umezu (Autore), Kazuo Umezu (Illustratore)

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
2126129,430 (3.64)7
In the aftermath of a strange earthquake, an entire elementary school vanishes, leaving nothing but a hole in the ground. While parents mourn and authorities investigate, the students and teachers of find themselves somewhere far away...somewhere cold and dark... a lifeless, nightmarish wasteland among which their school stands like a lone fortress. As panic turns to terror, as the rules start to fall apart, a 6th-grade boy named Sho and his friends must try to survive in a hostile new world...… (altro)
Utente:sauyadav
Titolo:The Drifting Classroom, Vol. 1 (1)
Autori:Kazuo Umezu (Autore)
Altri autori:Kazuo Umezu (Illustratore)
Info:VIZ Media LLC (2006), Edition: 1st, 208 pages
Collezioni:La tua biblioteca, In lettura, Lista dei desideri, Da leggere, Letti ma non posseduti, Preferiti
Voto:*****
Etichette:Nessuno

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The Drifting Classroom, Vol. 1 di Kazuo Umezu

  1. 10
    Il signore delle mosche di William Golding (scotchpenicillin)
    scotchpenicillin: Comment des enfants confrontés à une situation extraordinaire re-construisent un semblant de société...
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» Vedi le 7 citazioni

This is one of the best horror manga but it's really violent. If you don't have a good stomach don't read it. ( )
  Fidelias | Jan 9, 2020 |
Weird. Excellent. ( )
  chyde | Feb 5, 2014 |
“Adults always say ‘That can’t happen’ or ‘that’s impossible’ …But we know that /anything/ can happen. That’s why we’ve managed to survive.” -Sho, from vol. 3 of The Drifting Classroom, by Kazuo Umezu.
After a furious row with his mother before heading off late to his school in Tokyo, Sho Takamatsu’s morning already isn’t going well. But it’s about to get a lot worse: as he arrives there’s an explosion, an earthquake, then something even more extraordinary occurs.
As they pick themselves up and dust themselves off, the school’s inhabitants realise they are alive and (for the moment) unharmed. But the school seems to have moved. Suddenly, appallingly, there’s nothing outside the school gates except a barren, trackless wasteland. Where has the school gone to? What happened to the rest of the world? And what happens now?
That it’s the adults who crack first under the pressure of its bizarre and brutal premise is just one of the things I love about The Drifting Classroom. By the end of vol. 1 the school’s teachers and other staff are already turning in panic on themselves and, mercilessly, their students. But traumatized or psychotic adults are *just one* menace that Sho and his schoolmates will have to face. To make it to the end of all eleven books of this story these unlucky young people will need to work together to survive starvation, disease, a succession of weird and terrifying monsters – and each other.
The Drifting Classroom was first published in Japan (to instant acclaim) in the 1970s, but while reading it I couldn’t help thinking about two real events that had occurred just a couple of decades before. Writer/artist Kazuo Umezu was born in 1936: when he was the age of the children he writes about in this story he, too, witnessed living cities being suddenly and brutally replaced by poisonous wastelands when the USA dropped nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945.
I can’t give The Drifting Classroom a straight recommendation: parts of the story seem sudden and random, and the constant parade of hardships its young characters are forced to endure (OK, so what’s going to go wrong for them now? -No! That, too? You’re KIDDING!) sometimes made the reading experience tip over, for me, from tragedy and horror into camp and farce. But whenever I came close to giving up on this series something brilliant always pulled me back. As with some classic old horror movies, if you can look past the wonky bits of The Drifting Classroom you’ll find a wild and audacious story, packed with moments of jaw-dropping amazingness that this reader, at least, has never seen anywhere else. The context, outside the story, for the stoic way Sho and his friends face their tribulations adds a fascinating extra dimension. Well, it does for me anyway. ;D ( )
  othersam | Apr 12, 2012 |
A strange, unusual story, with shockingly detailed drawings. A young Japanese student finds himself transported to a wasteland, along with his entire school, after a fight with his mother. Rather than the normal "Lord of the Flies" type of story that would arise from hundreds of youngsters and few adults, the adults collapse under the strain, the students show remarkable self-reliance, and all is not as it appears...

A brilliant start to a bizarre, complex, science-fiction horror story. ( )
  emli638 | Aug 28, 2007 |
An earthquake happens in Tokyo, and as a result, an elementary school is swallowed up by the ground, and reappears in this odd, limbo-esque place. A good idea, but the actual book seems to be little more than set-up for the following parts of the series, and gore for the sake of shocking gore. Don't think I'll be continuing with this series. ( )
  orangemonkey | Mar 1, 2007 |
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In the aftermath of a strange earthquake, an entire elementary school vanishes, leaving nothing but a hole in the ground. While parents mourn and authorities investigate, the students and teachers of find themselves somewhere far away...somewhere cold and dark... a lifeless, nightmarish wasteland among which their school stands like a lone fortress. As panic turns to terror, as the rules start to fall apart, a 6th-grade boy named Sho and his friends must try to survive in a hostile new world...

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