2046: Reading Material

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Since my post a few days ago about getting into manga, I’ve been well and truly bitten by the bug, as it were, and I’m also about to branch out into my first light novels, which we’ll come onto a little later.

So far, I’ve read the first volume of Monster Musume, Is It Wrong to Try to Pick Up Girls in a Dungeon?  (better known as DanMachi) and High School DxD, and have subsequently picked up the subsequent five volumes of Monster Musume and two more of High School DxD. (The later volumes of DanMachi have proven surprisingly difficult to track down, a fact not helped by the fact that Amazon has its listings for the light novel and manga versions all squished together into a not-particularly-clear form.)

Longtime readers or those who know me will recognise all of the above titles as series that I’ve watched the anime of, and this was a deliberate choice. I was initially hesitant to do so, but it turns out that reading the manga having seen the anime (or, I imagine, vice versa — I haven’t done this way round yet) doesn’t particularly diminish the experience any. In fact, in many cases the manga, being slightly longer in form than your typical anime’s 13 20-minute episodes, goes into more detail than its animated counterpart, often with new story threads, deeper exploration of characters and sometimes even a different overall tone.

Light novels, meanwhile, are something I haven’t explored at all, and until recently I wasn’t even particularly sure if there was a distinction between them and, you know, just a plain ol’ novel. “Light novels” are very much a Thing in Japanese popular culture, though, with many popular series starting as a light novel and subsequently being adapted into other forms of media such as manga, anime, video games and visual novels, so I was curious to investigate this particular part of culture.

I haven’t read any yet, but I have picked up two volumes of Sword Art Online: Progressive, a retelling of Sword Art Online’s original Aincrad arc, focusing on more personal stories and a single “floor” of the game at a time. It’s an ambitious project, considering the Aincrad arc supposedly unfolded over the course of several years and 75 floors — the first two volumes just cover floors 1 and 2 — but I’ll be interested to see if it comes to fruition, plus the Sword Art Online anime drew some criticism from certain quarters for rushing through the narrative of the original light novel it was based on, so I’ll be interested to see the story retold (and tweaked a bit, from what I understand) from a new perspective.

Anyway, if you were wondering, a “light novel” appears to be the Japanese equivalent of young adult fiction: relatively short works, often illustrated, but primarily text-based rather than the visual nature of manga. I’m interested to dive in; it’s actually been quite a while since I’ve read any book (i.e. one with words rather than one with pictures and speech bubbles — not that there’s anything inherently “inferior” about that format) so this will be a nice return to form if the Progressive novels prove to be a compelling read; I used to absolutely devour books, but for one reason or another, I’ve not really found a lot of time for reading in the last few years.

Ironic, really, considering the number of words I’ve typed on this here blog over the last few years — including a substantial number of fiction prose — but perhaps this will give me some ideas of my own!


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5 thoughts on “2046: Reading Material

  1. Definitely keep us(me) updated on this Pete, I’m very interested. I certainly don’t have an issue with not having read anything in a while as I tend to go through 100-200 books per year. But I have not read any Japanese light novels, only major works of general fiction that were a large enough sensation to be translated into English. I actually really enjoyed all of Sword Art Online, both seasons, so I am very interested to see how those light novels turn out. If it turns out to be worth while I will definitely jump in.

    One manga that I really recommend that you read is Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind. Yes there is a fantastic anime of it, but frankly the anime covers about 1/6 of the total story, if that. And it ends up being so thoughtful and fantastic that I would rank it up there with Watchmen and the other graphic novels that have transcended the medium. VIZ has made a few editions available to English audiences but I have the massive 3 volume super nice boxed edition.

    1. Oops, 2 volume, not 3. The 3 one is the older version that I also have. But the 2 volume one is a very large almost “coffee table” size set and the ink work and paper quality was much improved.

  2. Are you only interested in manga that have had game/anime adaptations (that you’ve seen) or would you be open to some recommendations? We could help you get to “the good stuff” faster… or at least episodic or short series that wouldn’t take years to catch up with. ^^;

      1. Here’s some series that I’ve enjoyed in the past, then (sorry for being long-winded…):

        Black Jack: It’s a classic series by Osamu Tezuka, a man named Jack takes up mercenary medicine, because years ago he was miraculously stitched back together after a near-fatal accident that left his body in pieces. Medically impossible, but morally fascinating. Is it possible to be a “good” doctor when you ask for millions?

        Ōoku: The Inner Chambers: (by Fumi Yoshinaga) It’s based on Japanese history, but the characters ensure that it doesn’t feel dry. It’s a “what-if” scenario: a disease wipes out 50%+ of the men in Japan. How would it affect the shogunate and the country? It does do a realistic (and sometimes shocking) portrayal of how people react (and over a few generations of the disease, *don’t* react) to this situation.

        What Did You Eat Yesterday?: (by Fumi Yoshinaga) Much lighter subject matter than Ōoku: a slice-of-life about two gay men, a hairdresser and a lawyer, living together, with an emphasis on step-by-step recipes and cooking on the cheap without losing flavour.

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