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Mar. 14th, 2009 01:25 am
meganbmoore: (hilda and laures)
Wow, some of these have been sitting in my hard drive for months.

20 x Cantarella
13 x Seimaden
20 x Misc. Higuri You Art
24 x Tarot Cafe
21 x Dichen Lachman

Teasers:

  


the rest )
meganbmoore: (sleeping bride)
On the one hand, that needed to be a few chapters longer you wrap everything up neatly (despite what I wanted to be going on being what was going on.) On the other hand, it didn’t devote itself to kicking me while I was curled up in a fetal position, unlike several other mangas lately.

spoilers )Slow beginning, rushed ending, but overall a pretty good series with amazing art, interesting fairy tale-like stories, and some interesting themes and ideas regarding love and devotion.

meganbmoore: (next stop: amnesia)
I think my brain is warped. Observe:

Ash: “Hi, I’m a centuries old dragon who took in a little human girl whose mother was burned as a witch. After raising said girl, I seem to have selflessly loved her, and my death was probably to protect her.”

Me: “Bad Ash! No falling in love with girls you raised!”

Belus: “I found Pamela when she was broken and lost and alone and bound her to me and have been playing a game only I know all the rules to with her in the almost 800 years since.”

Me: “Yes please!”

And it seems my overall annoyance with the “ancient mysterious other/centuries younger human” trope doesn’t apply when the “centuries younger human” is about 800 years old.

(All this is set up in the first volumes, just looked into more here.)

The stories about Pamela’s customers continue to focus mostly on people who love too much, or are misguided in love (a theme that’s becoming more and more pertinent to the main plot), but we’re also starting to look at love besides romantic love. And we have love-from-beyond-the-grave! Ok, fine, that isn’t new. But it made me happy!

Mostly, though, these volumes explored Pamela’s past with both Belus and Ash, as well as what the new Ash is up to. (There are two Ashes! Or maybe the same one! Or a reincarnation! Or someone completely different who just looks like him!)

SPOILERS! )
meganbmoore: (himawari)
I have a bit of an odd history with this manhwa. Well, not odd, maybe. The manhwaga, Sang-Sun Park, was the artist of Les Bijoux, one of the first manhwa I ever read. The art was so amazing that it actually took me a while to notice how incredibly weird (yet compelling) the plot was. If I ever find my copies of Les Bijoux (they went missing when I moved, along with Mars, Petshop of Horrors and some random other things) I will reread it and post on it. I’ve been meaning to anyway for a while. Anyway, a bit after that Tokyopop started putting out The Tarot Café, a manhwa about an immortal woman named Pamela who does tarot readings out of her café, and I bought it faithfully. And then it suddenly stopped coming out. And then several other series I was reading stopped coming out even though they weren’t finished, and in a fit of annoyance, I got rid of them all. Naturally, most have since been completed, if not always by the same publisher, including The Tarot Café. But by the same publisher.

Much of the setup is common for the Mysterious Shopkeeper genre. The early stories are self-contained, and focused more on the customers than the main characters. It isn’t until we get to the end of volume two that we start to see into the past of Pamela, whose mother was burned as a witch in the 13th century. Belus, an old acquaintance (and possibly more) of Pamela’s who seems to know more about what’s going on in the bigger picture than she does, remains a complete enigma. The only main character whose complete story is known (as far as we know at this point) is that of Aaron, a young werewolf who works for Pamela. Even his story, though, is a tool to introduce Nebiros, a man who is even more of an enigma than Belus. Then there’s Ash, a young man who may or may not be the reincarnation (or original incarnation) of the man who originally made Pamela immortal.

While most series in this genre seem to deal-at least initially-with people who have a fatal flaw, or who have a sin to make amends for, Pamela’s customers tend to be people who have loved too intensely, or who didn’t appreciate love enough when they had it. Each of the contained stories is, in some fashion, a love story, be it tragic, bittersweet, or happy. In addition, the themes of the stories are very strongly based on fairy tale tropes. Not the Disney versions, but the older, darker kind little girls don’t know about when they say they want a fairy tale wedding. In addition to the intensity of love and not appreciating the love you have, reincarnation, loss and creation are all pretty heavy themes, not to mention eternal devotion peeking its head out. Having read a little beyond this point, I remember them also being a factor in the larger scheme of Pamela and Belus’s lives and history, themes that are already starting to show up here.

Beautiful, a bit surreal, with interesting themes and mythology, and only seven volumes!

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