25th Manga Division Critiques
Japanese Manga Goes beyond Sturgeonʼs Law
Even as a manga freak, I braced myself for the pain
of reading so many entries for judging, but I ended up
being exhilarated like an ant that’s fallen into a sugar
pot. What surprised me was the high quality of the entries—every entry was excellent, including the almost
unknown ones. There were only three ratings based
on my criteria: “interesting,” “very interesting,” and
“extremely interesting.” Sturgeon’s law, stating “ninety
percent of everything is crap,” doesn’t seem to apply
to modern Japanese manga. I don’t mean that now is
the golden era, but rather, the evolution of manga will
continue. I was convinced of this when I saw the entries
this year.
The Grand Prize winner, Golden Raspberry by
MOCHIDA Aki, instantly carries away readers with
its particularly unique characters and powerful and
speedy story development. Maintaining the identity of
the girl’s manga genre, it also appeals to male readers. The Excellence Award winner, The Concierge at
Hokkyoku Department Store by NISHIMURA Tsuchika,
consists of extremely fine drawings, comparable to
those by TAKANO Fumiko, with an eccentric story of
a department store where extinct animals come to
shop. Another Excellence Award winner, THE BEST
WE COULD DO: AN ILLUSTRATED MEMOIR by Thi BUI
portrays the previously unrevealed postwar history of
Vietnamese refugees, along with the history of a family.
It illustrates a lower-case world of “family” that is often
hidden behind the capitalized term, “Refugee,” in a very
realistic manner. The Social Impact Award winner, ONNA NO SONO NO HOSHI by WAYAMA Yama, doesn’t
need much explanation. In a world of a women’s high
school, drawn in a style resembling that of ITO Junji,
peaceful days with only good girls unroll without bullying or teasing. But why does this work generate such
disturbing laughter? The impact of the appearance of
WAYAMA Yama will likely persist for a while.