Otherworld Barbara Vol. 1

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Description

Brief Description:
"Original Japanese edition published in 2003 by ShoGakukan, Tokyo" --Colophon.

Review Quotes:
A gripping, supernaturally infused sci-fi thriller. Hagio, one of the mothers of shojo and josei manga, is very much on her game, making this complex, exciting story a dream to read.-- "Booklist"

Review Quotes:
A binge-inducing treat; full of twists and turns that make it hooking and full of real and relatable sentiments that make it hard to forget.-- "Asian Movie Pulse"

Review Quotes:
Dream pilots explore the dreamworlds of others in this beautifully drawn sci-fi manga by one of Japan's most celebrated manga creators.-- "The Barnes & Noble Sci-Fi & Fantasy Blog"

Publisher Marketing:
Fantagraphics Books is proud to present the first volume (of two) of Moto Hagio's Otherworld Barbara, in which Tokio discovers a phantom island named Barbara. Then there's a mysterious and missing geneticist, an eccentric clergyman, a grieving grandmother granted temporary youth, a psychologist killed by a freak tornado... Hagio offers a sci-fi explanation for these seemingly random paranormal elements, and makes it all matter with believable characters in complex and subtle relationships.This book won the"Nebula Award of Japan" (Nihon SF Taisho Award) in 2006.

Review Citations:

  • Publishers Weekly 11/14/2016 (EAN 9781606999431, Hardcover)

Contributor Bio:Hagio, Moto
Moto Hagio was born May 12, 1949, in Omuta City, Fukuoka Prefecture. She is one of a group of women born that year that broke into the male-dominated manga industry and pioneered the shojo (girls') movement. Hagio's Heart of Thomas, inspired by the 1964 film A Special Friendship, was one of the early entries in the shonen-ai (boys in love) subgenre. Her major works include A Drunken Dream, A, A', They Were Eleven, and Otherworld Barbara. She's won the Japanese Medal of Honor with the Purple Ribbon (the first woman comics creator to do so), received Japan's SF Grand Prize, the Osamu Tezuka Culture Award Grand Prize, and an Inkpot Award, among other accolades. She lives in the Saitama Prefecture.


Contributor Bio:Thorn, Rachel
Rachel Thorn is from in Lansdale, Pennsylvania. She is a cultural anthropologist, writer, and an associate professor in the manga department at Kyoto Seika University. Her translations include the New York Times Best-Seller Nijigahara Holograph by Inio Asano and Hayao Miyazaki's Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind.


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