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Solanin
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Solanin

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Description:

College graduates struggle to cope with the real world. Music offers refuge in this modern manga with an American attitude.

Meiko Inoue is a recent college grad working as an office lady in a job she hates. Her boyfriend Shigeo is permanently crashing at her apartment because his job as a freelance illustrator doesn't pay enough for rent. And her parents in the country keep sending her boxes of veggies that just rot in her fridge. Straddling the line between her years as a student and the rest of her life, Meiko struggles with the feeling that she's just not cut out to be a part of the real world.

Product Details:
Author: Inio Asano
Perfect Paperback: 432 pages
Publisher: VIZ Media LLC
Publication Date: October 21, 2008
Language: English
ISBN: 1421523213
Product Length: 8.2 inches
Product Width: 5.88 inches
Product Height: 1.25 inches
Product Weight: 1.29 pounds
Package Length: 8.11 inches
Package Width: 5.83 inches
Package Height: 1.57 inches
Package Weight: 1.28 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 17 reviews
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review: 4.5 ( 17 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

9 of 10 found the following review helpful:

5Best graphic novel I've read in a few years.Oct 21, 2008
By nick~
I picked up this graphic novel on a whim at the local bookstore recently, as I was looking for something involving, but not multi-issue. Even by the end of the first ten pages, I absolutely could not put this book down. The artwork is unique, along with having very nice detail in almost every frame. There are even a few multi-page sections that are full color, which is cool. The story itself is something that many people my age can relate to. The main character is a girl who feels that she just isn't cut out for the adult world. The novel follows a part of this girl's life, along with having a few chapters from the perspective of her friends or boyfriend. I found the story completely captivating, and read the entire graphic novel in the span of a couple hours. I would (and have!) suggest this book to many of my friends, and nearly anyone who doesn't want to let go of the freedom of childhood just yet.

5 of 5 found the following review helpful:

4SolaninNov 03, 2008
By Kayuga
The art work in this manga is very impressive. It's actually like reading an anime. If that makes any sense. What i mean is that, the mangaka doesn't waste any frames. There isn't an excess of close-ups, or flower petals floating around in the background. The page layout therefore, is very simply, structure-wise, but all the magic happens in the boxes, because the angles and points of view are very interesting. There's lots of movement. I know this is not a shojo manga, but one of shojo manga's biggest faults is an inability to show the characters doing anything but standing around and looking serious/pretty. In her limited frames she shows you so much more, because she is all the more careful with what she depicts. Honestly, that's what makes her style so amazing.
They are like storyboards of a film. So i say, Like reading an anime.
Basically the plot is a couple of friends who have graduated college, and have jobs that they don't like, and they don't want to keep working them but they don't know how to do otherwise.
I can really relate to Meiko at her job, so intially i really liked it. But then she quits and she's bored not doing anything,and i got bored as well. But then i picked the manga back up again and continued to read it and the pace/plot started to pick back up again.
There's a lot of powerful emotions expressed in here. But nothing amazing ever really happens. And while the turn of events may be really realistic, they don't always make the most exciting thing to read about.
For what this manga does, it does well. It just sort of meanders, which is kind of like life.
however, make no mistake, this is a very well made manga and well worth your time.

8 of 10 found the following review helpful:

4Too Many VegetablesJan 29, 2009
By Daitokuji31
Although the manga, Japanese comics, boom has settled down in recent years, in comparison to its height in 2001 or 2002, the number of manga in large bookstores has surpassed the number of available American and European graphic novels and, in some stores, surpasses the number of fantasy and science fiction novels available. However, while there are indeed a number of manga aimed at older readers, many of these books contain excessive violence and nudity which attempt to hide otherwise vacuous stories. Yet, there are some books, like Inio Asano's Solanin, that squeak through into translation and show that manga contains simple but effective slice-of-life stories that are on level with Alex Robinson (Box Office Poison) and Craig Thompson (Blankets).

Solanin centers on the life of Meiko Inoue, a petite, cute, but not overly pretty 24-year-old who lives in Tokyo and works at a second rate company as an office lady (basically a job which consists of preparing tea and making copies). Having loss her youthful vigor and enjoyment of big city life, Meiko often complains to her boyfriend Taneda about her life. One day, a half-asleep Taneda suggests to Meiko that she quit her job and she does just that. Yet, instead of opening herself to a world of free time and opportunities to embroil herself in pursuits that she would not normally have time for, she lazes around as her savings dwindle.

Desiring change, but not willing to buckle down and change herself, Meiko encourages Taneda, and his college friends, the rotund, sloppy Kato and the hirsute Rip, to revamp their band for them to attempt to regain their youthful vigor and to capture their fading ideals. However, is this goal really obtainable, or is it nothing more than a pipedream?

While not drawn in an overly realistic style, Asano's work does not feature the large eyes and small mouths that some might find irritating. The characters are of a relatively simple design, but are easily distinguishable from each other, and their overall features look Japanese which is often a rarity in the world of manga. Like many other manga artists, Asano's true talent shines in his renditions of buildings, motorcycles, and guitars. An interesting aspect of the artwork is that Asano inserts a number of photographs within the art. These can be a bit off putting at first, but eventually they blend into the overall composition.

Although Meiko is the main character of the graphic novel, Asano gives each major character his or her fair share of pages. This aspect of the graphic novel is done quite well, so the reader can easily understand the intricate relationships shared between the characters and come to understand reactions which at first might seem a bit puzzling. The characters personalities are quite diverse with Meiko's indecisiveness, Kato's slovenly nature, Rip's bizarre stoicism, and Taneda's coolness. However, these characters are not limited to these qualities and they knit a tight web with each other.

Asano drew Solanin at a time in which he was the same age as the characters, 24, which was a time in which he too was struggling to find himself. Solanin reflects the vacuity that a number of the younger residents of Tokyo feel, as well as young people across the globe, and the powerlessness they feel when faced with such emptiness. Yet, Solanin is not without hope, and it shows that true happiness can be found in the mundane

3 of 3 found the following review helpful:

5Thoughtful and witty look at 20-something life in JapanFeb 17, 2009
By Erica Tyler-haw
I had stopped reading manga for a few years because the only type I saw were marketed towards a much younger audience. I am VERY glad I took a chance with Solanin. It was not what I expected, the story twists and the characters are well thought out. The story was really touching without being sappy fluff. Excellent writing! READ IT!

3 of 3 found the following review helpful:

5Bittersweet lovin'Jan 09, 2009
By Caramel Milk Tea
I dunno how they did it, but Inio Asano truly captured what it felt like to be out of college and trying to make that transition between a student and an working class slave, I mean, adult. If only I read this book 5 years ago, I would have known I was not alone... This book is brilliant!

See all 17 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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