
Links go to search results. Availability varies by region.
かすとろ式
14
1
Finished
Dec 2004
8.5/10
Average Review Score
100%
Recommend It
2
Reviews Worldwide
I have NEVER read or seen a manga like this. You can comprehend the beginning pretty well but as you move along, in my opinion, it's a very bizarre story of cause and effect. By page 13, we see an extremely complex happening all at once thus the cause and effect begins. Then after that I honestly have no idea what starts happening lmao. But I continued because it's only 16 pages long and the art itself kept me going. It is outstanding. The 3D concept is out of this world. I have never seen a manga artist like Shintaro Kago take manga to thenext level like he does. So that's why it really disappoints/maddens me to see people rate this manga, including his other works, so low because "there's nothing really to it," but really there is SOOOOOOOOO much to this manga; that is why I stress to future readers you MUST approach Kasutoro Shiki with a completely open and different mind. Just because there is no obvious plot line, can't we appreciate a manga solely for it's art if it's done just as perfectly as Kasutoro Shiki's was????
1. Koukou Kansen Shoukougun (Oral Cavity Infectious Syndrome) 2. Gotouchi Kankou Annai 3. Ekimae Uramichi 4. Ekimae Souzou (Genesis) 5. Ekimae Secchaku (Superglue) 6. Ekimae Akutagawa 7. Todo no Tsumori 8. Bunretsu Zoushoku (Multiplication) 9. Kokumin no Sousei (Abstraction) 10. Blow-up 11. Youjin Muyou 12. Tsuioku no Kanata (The Memories of Others) 13. Lord of the Ringu 14. Guruguru Shikou
This anthology manga is an extremely mixed bag for me, There's a good variety of stories compiled in this book, many of them with very different goals and themes. The only common factors shared by all the stories are the gore and eroticism, as expected of Kago's work. Kago does a phenomenal job of utilising the medium of manga to its maximum potential unlike any mangaka I've encountered. The visual presentation of these stories is fantastic, and the non linear nature of them makes for a mind boggling experience. His deconstruction and exploration of the medium are strikingly unique, and he takes these deconstructions to the absoluteextreme. If there are several mangaka that push manga to its absolute limits, I would name Kago among them without hesitation. These stories (particularly "Abstraction" and one of his other works "Fraction") are the ones in which his creativity and genius really shine, and if the anthology consisted only in these kinds of short stories, this manga would easily be pushing a 9 out of 10. In addition there are a number of comedic stories compiled in the manga. The style of comedy Kago employs is definitely unique and effective. He subverts expectations, writes from the most bizarre premises, and he does not stop. He'll present the reader with a fascinatingly absurd scenario, and he will keep taking it further and further into complete absurdity and I love every minute of it. With the addition of the small comedic nuances and subversive plot points, it makes for hilarious absurdist comedy and a refreshing break from the largely disturbing content of the remainder of the manga. What really brings the quality of this manga down, for me personally, are the few stories scattered throughout which offer little to nothing to the reader other than repulsion. There is nothing clever or comedic in these stories, just excruciatingly detailed depictions of just about anything shocking Kago can manage to squeeze into the "story," for lack of a better word. I understand that pushing the boundaries of what is acceptable is absolutely integral to Kago's work, and he does this effectively in a lot of his stories that seem to have had a great deal of thought and creativity put into them, but sadly, these quality shorts are dragged down by the eroguro fests included that serve no purpose other than to be as disgusting and shocking as possible. I don't want to call it lazy because the art in these stories is still meticulously detailed, but they really offer nothing else of worth. Overall, I would highly recommend reading "Abstraction" from this collection if you read nothing else. There are some fantastic comedy shorts slipped into this collection as well, but I would just skip stories like Todo no Tsumori which are really little more than just nauseating.
