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Graphic Novel Review: Tomie: Complete Deluxe Edition by Junji Ito

cover art for Tomie: Complete Deluxe Edition by Junji Ito

 

Tomie: Complete Deluxe Edition by Junji Ito

Viz Media, 2016

ISBN: 9781421590561

Available: Hardcover, Kindle edition

Buy: Bookshop.orgAmazon.com

 

Femme fatale Tomie Kawakami, with long dark hair, hypnotic eyes, and a signature mole under her left eye, makes men love her, regardless of their age. She drives them to madness and sometimes murder, whether the target is a rival or herself. Dismemberment is the common treatment of her corpse, which comes with unexpected results. Her body has the ability to regenerate, multiply, and animate.

 

Chapter 1 opens with Reiko, Tomie’s classmate and best friend, discussing the titular character’s death. However, Tomie returns during the middle of a classroom lecture, much to the shock of everyone. Tomie’s death is told in a flashback. When the class heads out for a field trip, Tomie and the teacher are having a conversation where it is revealed they are involved in an affair. This turns into an argument and Tomie falls off the cliffside. The teacher and students agree to dispose of the body by dismembering and passing all 42 pieces out to everyone with instructions to dump the pieces in different places. Tomie’s heart is given to Reiko for disposal. Upon Tomie’s return, Reiko and another classmate want to turn themselves in for what happened, but the rest of the class gives chase, only to be rescued, in a way, by Tomie. At the end of the chapter, Reiko has moved and wonders about her mysterious friend. The last panel reveals a heart regenerating limbs and a face that has the same mole and telltale beauty in a cave near the beach.

 

This first chapter sets the tone for the entire manga. Ultimately, the reader is left with more questions than answers, but Ito still manages to tell a compelling story. Is Tomie a monster, or is it possible that depending on the chapter she is the reflection of humanity’s fears and obsessions? She can dig into the minds of the men she attracts, often by a mere glance. She’s often sweet to her victims (or targets} one minute, and insufferably cruel the next. Tomie is adept at gaslighting anyone she interacts with. In one chapter, a piece of her is kept in a vat in the basement of Morita Hospital. When Tomie fully regenerates, the doctor responsible for the experiment attempts to take ownership of her, which goes badly for him and those involved. In another chapter, two men are obsessed with Tomie, both convinced that their rival’s’ version is the false Tomie and needs to be murdered.

 

That is not to say that everyone that comes into Tomie’s crosshairs is an appropriate target. A young woman babysits for a deranged couple who found a swaddled baby Tomie on their property one night. The infant is obsessed with anything red, and the parents are driven to do everything they can to accommodate their new child. Another chapter, which is rather disturbing, reveals that Tomie affects the mind of a child so much that he becomes obsessed with her to the point of denying his real mother and starts calling Tomie by that title. Her tendencies to seduce men are leveled at this young boy and can be considered grooming behavior.

 

This volume is more than the story of Tomie. It is the evolution of Ito in his storytelling and his artwork. With over 700 pages, the omnibus is massive. The first installment of the Tomie series was published in 1987 and the last in 2000. Ito’s artwork and storytelling becomes more detailed over time, so the volume not only provides a great story but also a kind of archive of Ito’s work. This was not the last appearance of Tomie, as there was a series of films produced between 1998 and 2011. This was my first exposure to Tomie, which ultimately led me to the manga. These are worth a look if you are so inclined. Highly recommended.

 

Reviewed by Lizzy Walker

Booklist: Final Girls

      cover art for My Heart Is A Chainsaw by Stephen Graham Jones  Wow, final girls have really had a great summer! July saw the release of The Final Girl Support Group by Grady Hendrix (reviewed here), and with the very end of August, I see Stephen Graham Jones’ newest book, My Heart Is A Chainsaw, is being released. The final Girls Support Group by Grady HendrixI have not had the opportunity to read that yet, but I highly recommend The Final Girls Support Group (on a side note, my daughter was delighted that the characters were getting therapy).

The final girl is the survivor who takes down the monster in slasher movies. When fiction touches on her, it’s usually in a meta sort of way. Here are a couple of titles to try out if you are in the mood for a tale about final girls.

 

 

 

 

Final Girls by Riley Sager follows Quincy Carpenter. the lone survivor of a massacre at a cabin in the woods ten years earlier. Quincy, along with two other girls, Lisa and Sam, who survived slasher-style massacres, were labeled “Final Girls” by the media.cover art for Final Girls by Riley Sager  She has done her best to move on, finding a boyfriend and starting a baking blog, but things start to fall apart when Lisa apparently dies from suicide, leaving a message on Quincy’s voicemail. Then Sam, who has been off the grid for years, appears at Quincy’s door and Quincy’s carefully constructed life starts to fall apart. The twist in this story was not what I expected it to be. Sager does a great job of deconstructing the final girl trope and this was a very difficult book to put down.

 

 

 

 

cover art for Final Girls by Mira Grant  Final Girls by Mira Grant introduces Esther Hoffman, a journalist determined to debunk proprietary virtual reality technology that situates participants in horror movie scenarios to force them to face their worst fears. The scientist in charge, Dr. Jennifer Webb, challenges Esther to try it out with her. Events out of their control result in the two of them being trapped in the virtual reality scenario together, with disturbing results.

 

 

 

 

Final Girl by David Hutchison

Final Girl Pocket Manga vol. 1 by David Hutchison drops four girls in a seemingly abandoned, isolated town, where they are stalked by its residents, and must escape their nightmare situation. Only one of them can be the final girl, though… Readers voted for their choice of final girl, and a bloody, full color climax reveals the survivor.

 

 

 

 

 

cover art for The Last Final Girl by Stephen Graham Jones  The Last Final Girl  is also by Stephen Graham Jones. Taking a . chance with an experimental format, he has written it in a screenplay format, following the structure of a slasher movie. His love of the genre is clear, with many references to existing movies and “in-jokes”. The structure and the dependence of the audience’s understanding of the text on comprehension mean this will appeal to a very niche audience, but that audience will love it. Graham has also written an amazing final girl in his last novel, The Only Good Indians. 

 

 

 

 

The Mary Shelley Club by Goldy Moldavsky starts us out with a final girl– Rachel Chavez, who was attacked in her home and survived. Rachel is a scholarship student at a fancy private school who starts out with no friends, cover art for The Mary Shelley Club by Goldy Moldavskyuntil she discovers a secret club of horror lovers, The Mary Shelley Society, who create “fear tests”, horror scenarios that they try out on friends, classmates, and family. There’s no way this could end badly, right?

Graphic Novel Review: H.P. Lovecraft’s At the Mountains of Madness Volume 1 adaptation and artwork by Gou Tanabe, translation by Zack Davisson

H.P. Lovecraft’s At the Mountains of Madness, The First Volume adaption and artwork by Gou Tanabe, translated by Zack Davisson

Dark Horse, 2019

ISBN13: 978-1506710228

Available: Paperback, Kindle, comiXology

In this Cthulhu mythos tale, an expedition team from Miskatonic University headed by Professor William Dyer travels to Antarctica early in 1931. Lake, a member of the team, becomes increasingly obsessed with discovering the secrets of a rock sample they excavate early in their exploration. He leads a separate team to push forward to find more. They find looming black mountains, seemingly unnaturally formed caverns, and a complete zoological sample of a large creature that resembles a creature described in the famed Necronomicon housed at Miskatonic University. As scientists are wont to do, Lake dissects the specimen. The two camps had been communicating regularly via radio contact, but when Lake stops responding, Dyer and the rest of the team make the trek to Lake’s camp. When they arrive, however, they come across a grisly scene: the crew and sled dogs assigned to the camp are dead, and the bodies are mangled or dissected. The team also finds a star shaped mound of snow near the scene which turns out to contain an inhuman discovery. After recovering the remains of eleven bodies, they find that one of the members of Lake’s camp, Gedney, is missing.

Volume 1 of Gou Tanabe’s manga adaptation of H.P Lovecraft’s novella At the Mountains of Madness is a beautiful and haunting version of this story. Tanabe’s artwork is an interesting and effective balance between the darkness of the caves and confined spaces to vast and breathtaking landscapes. A major difference, which I found to enhance the story, was that it was told from the point of view of both camps. The original was told from the perspective of only the main camp. This, combined with the added dialogue between the camps and artwork depicting the emotional reactions of the characters involved, created more of a sense of fear and foreboding than Lovecraft’s work. I can’t wait to see what Tanabe does with the continuation of this story in Volume 2. I would recommend this title for those who enjoy cosmic horror, manga from the horror genre, or different interpretations of Lovecraft (even those that he clearly based off of other works—in this case, Edgar Allan Poe’s The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket). If you are a purist, this probably isn’t for you. Highly recommended.

 

Contains: corpses, dissected human body

 

Reviewed by Lizzy Walker