



3 of 5
Story and Art by Kaori Yuki
Released in the US by Viz Shojo Beat
Slugline: Bad Fairy! No crushing people's hopes and dreams!
Ian
and Rin were old friends, despite the fact that Ian claimed to see
fairies. One day he managed to show them to Rin, but Ian's jealous and
powerful father forcedRin's family to move away. Ian's gotten more
depressed over the years, especially since he has a dark shadow named
Tokage. But when Rin's returns when Ian is in high school, they begin
to plan to escape. But the plan is interrupted when Tokage seizes
control of Ian's father and kills Ian. Ian ends up as a spirit and is
consigned to the otherworld with the fairy Ainsel, where they come to
an understanding that Ainsel will help Ian. Ian makes a deal with
Kaito, a dealer of fairy cubes, taking over the body of a dead boy and
discovering took over his dead body and moving on Rin. Ian, asEriya,
tries to get Rin to realize Tokage's true nature, but it is only when
Tokage destroys another fairy masquerading as human than Rin discovers
what is going on and flees with Ian/Eriya house, where Eriya's
grandmother realizes that something is up
And
I forgot, there are fairy like murders, strange people that seem
unusually interested in Ian's success or failure, fairies possessing
people after they die using fairy cubes and there is elderly blind
woman that has far greater idea on what is going on than what it first
appears.
For a manga,
this the plot is very dense, with several major changes in the
characters and setting in the single volume. I've not even seen this
dense plotting in US comics for a while. The denseness does present a
problem now and then when they just dump some information and keeps on
going without really giving you time to digest it, so when you read
this you have to be willing to read it carefully, since it will not be
repeated and hammered into you like many other manga. But that makes
this a rarer, more interesting read. I believe that there is a market
out there for meatier manga, that has more story whereas manga
traditionally has been stronger in conveying mood and emotion, I just
hope that the readers for this title will be able to find it. There is
nothing obvious about Fairy Cube that shows how it stand out a different in structure from other shojo titles. I haven't read Kaori Yuki's other titles, Angel Sanctuary (though I think Miranda was less than impressed by it) and Godchild,
so I am unsure if Fairy Cube is representative of her works. This level
of dense storytelling has its problems, since sometimes things whip by
too fast or seem to be dropped too casually, but it is something
different as compared the run of the mill flood of manga titles.
This is just one of the many reviews that gets posted at Prospero's Manga, a manga review site with over 400 manga and manga-related reviews. We also has previously posted reviews here and articles here on TokyoPop Online. Please come check out our new reviews, a new one every Monday, Wednesday and Friday on Prospero's Manga!
Fairy Cube, vol. 1 is available from Right Stuf, Intl., an online retailer specializing in anime and manga.
-Ferdinand
Naughty Fairy! No crushing hopes and dreams!
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I got the first volume like two weeks ago.. and it was really really good! The art is absolutely beautiful and I fell in love with the characters. Whoever reviewing this is correct in that there is a LOT of info in the storyline, but it didn't stop me from enjoying it. I can't wait for the second volume!! =D
BUNNYBOY86
2008-06-10 12:39:07