Manga Friday: Miki Falls
Mark Crilley has been influenced by Japan before: his best-known work, the long all-ages Akiko series, is about a Japanese girl who has various adventures on alien worlds, and various elements of Japanese culture found their way into that book. But Akiko was still clearly a Western comic by a Western creator.
Miki Falls, on the other hand, is a deliberate attempt at what’s called an “OEL Manga” â something that follows many of the conventions of Japanese comics but was written as an Original English Language work. Crilley doesn’t draw his book backwards â wisely, I think, since if it can be difficult for a reader to switch orientation, I can only imagine how difficult it would be for a creator to do so â but it’s otherwise a very manga-influenced work. And so I’m looking at it this week as our “Manga Friday” feature.
Miki is just starting her senior year of high school in a fairly rural area of Japan. She’s determined to be really herself during this new year â not to go along with other people because it’s easier. (This seems to be a common desire for manga protagonists, possibly â he said, putting on his armchair group psychologist hat â because Japan is such a homogenous, conformist society.) But, since this is a manga story â and, to be less culturally specific, because it is a story about a teenage girl, and mostly written for other teenage girls â she meets a boy. A new boy in school. A mysterious, attractive, fascinating, keeps-to-himself boy. A boy named Hiro Sakurai.
Miki tells herself that she’s not falling in love with Hiro, but of course she is. And of course he’s utterly aloof, ignoring her â and everyone else in the school â at all times. Spring is the story of their meeting, and Miki’s budding love-hate relationship with Hiro (love him because he’s a dreamy boy, hate him because he won’t even look at her). At the end, we learn the secret, very manga-esque, reason why Hiro must hold himself aloof from all love…nay! from any normal human emotion! (Oops. I’m channeling Stan Lee there. That’s not a specific hint, but Miki and Hiro’s relationship does have aspects very familiar to Western comics readers, with a large helping of angst.)

I LOVE CHRISTMAS!
This one’s for Elayne and
Have you been to the Beeb’s
Our favorite role models, The Katzenjammer Kids, turned 110 years old yesterday. In case you weren’t aware, the newspapter strip is still being published each Sunday.
Today is young adult fantasy writer Tamora Pierce’s 53rd birthday. Pierce is most famous for creating young heroines, most memorably, the medieval transvestite, Alanna of Trebond from the series,
Author Terry Pratchett
How can we let it go by without acknowledging the great squid pirate, the undead stepdad, the aged rockstar, the bad ass vampire lord, and Slartibartfast?
