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T**G
Getting the word out.
Shadowstar combines the cute with the disturbing. Kitoh's character designs are different from most other manga artists in a positive way. He employs views and perspectives that raise him a cut above other artists.Take Tsuda's Karekano as an example. While I enjoyed the storyline, ideas, and character designs, the artist employs many still shots and head on or side views. Kitoh shows a wider repetoire techniques.Through the series, I found the main characters realized and the mysteries compelling. If you like volume 1, 2-5 do not disappoint.
J**S
The sunny beginning to a relentlessly dark tale
Looking back on Shadow Star's first volume after I've read up to its eleventh, it really is amazing how misleading this series is. It's wonderful, deep, and unique--but misleading. It seems to start off as a shojo or magical girl tale, with some hints of Pokémon here and there. But once a few more characters are introduced, it plunges straight into the abyss and never really leaves.Despite the fact that from a lighthearted beginning blooms an impossibly creepy and disturbing alien horror, the first volume of this wonderful series is great nonetheless. It tells the story of the energetic sixth grader Shiina Tamai, who discovers an otherworldly star creature while swimming off the shore of a small island during summer vacation. She names the flying, shape-shifting alien Hoshimaru and takes him home with her. On the flight home after an encounter with a sword beast that almost destroys her plane, and once she gets back to the city, Shiina quickly learns that Hoshimaru is only one of the dozens of psychic critters that have come to Earth. Her new, painfully shy friend Akira Sakura is also linked with one of these beings (called shadow dragons), and that not all shadow dragon owners are so kind... and many will not rest until they wipe out the laws of the world and rebuild the planet to their own liking.From start to finish, it's a fantastic journey through the human psyche; every single one of the people with a shadow dragon is a fraught teenager with deep secrets and twisted desires. This shows exactly what kids would do with the power to kill, crush, slice, and blast their way through all of their problems.Setting up the complex plot to come, in volume 1 Shiina is saved from drowning by a mysterious girl, she and Akira learn of each other's young shadow dragons, and a single boy begins devising a plot to bring down a nearby aviation company. Coupled with smart dialogue and a thin, sharp art style, here Shadow Star begins outlining some basic points while catching readers off-guard by its happy nature. As a satisfying opening that keeps you interested and exposes more key points than the manga, kicking off very complicated and mature stories rarely gets this good.
B**N
Special friends
A young girl named Shiina vacations in the summer with her grandparents and discovers a strange, star-shaped creature under the water just offshore. Swimming in an unsafe area, she nearly drowns, but the creature saves her and she secretly adopts it. Meanwhile, shape-changing "dragons" are making their presence known, causing chaos in the skies. And an older, disturbed girl Shiina meets in her kendo class may have a connection to her unearthly companion.What does it all mean? "Starflight" provides the setup and introduces the characters, but answers will come later. SHADOW STAR begins like a lighthearted girl's adventure, but soon takes a darker turn. I am looking forward to seeing the mystery unfold in future volumes.For those who have been following the serial in Dark Horse's SUPER MANGA BLAST, this collection reprints material from the first six issues.
M**S
Killer Pokemon?
I started reading this story when it first appeared in Dark Horse's Super Manga Blast comic, and it really grabbed my attention. The story is about a young girl named Shiina who is saved by an alien starfish creature. The starfish, which she calls Hoshi Maru (round star), saves her from drowning and they form a bond.It turns out that Hoshi Maru can do a lot of cool things, like fly, transform, morph into different shapes, and even communicate telephatically with Shiina. He's sort of like an alien Pokemon. After you read the story, you will realize that it has a lot of similarities to Pokemon. There's all these kids running around with their own "shadow stars" transforming and causing trouble.But I would say that this is a bit more grown up than Pokemon because there are a lot of questionable scenes. I wouldn't call it R-rated, but there a few scenes in it that will make you wonder what audience this comic is for. Sometimes you'll think it's a girl comic, because of the cutesy art, but the aliens are all very scary and they go around killing people. Most of the violence happens "off page", but don't be surprised to find a few shocking images, like when one of Shiina's friends is thinking about committing suicide by slitting her wrists.In the end, I'd still classify this manga as a Sci Fi alien story, but it crosses a lot of different genres -- young girl, pokemon, etc... However, as "alien manga" go, this isn't the best there is. I think Parasyte is a better story. But if you already read that and want more, or if you sorta liked it but want something tamer, then this might be just what you are looking for.
C**L
don't let the cuteness fool you, this is serious manga...
It starts out looking a bit like Totoro, begins to look magical girl, then takes a left and heads straight for the twilight zone. This is great manga with real characters. Shiina is lighthearted but determined but very unlike Sailor Moon. Akira is disturbing, she makes this series definitely not for kids! There are secrets behind secrets in this story and I can't wait to see more.
K**Y
I really liked this
i really like this manga, its about Shiina a normal girl who gets rescued by Hoshimaru, a strange starfish thing. this manga can be dark at times, and a little grusome, but its also very light in parts, and cute. i really enjoyed reading this, and the next book, and i recommend it.
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