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[Story notes copied to the story.
- P. Dark]
Dear Stan,
This is my first fan letter to you as the creator of
Usagi Yojimbo. (although as part of the Groo Crew, you have
had the misfortune of being included in my salutations to that comic.) I am
really enjoying reading his adventures. Usagi is one cool rabbit. He has joined
Groo as the only comics on my order list at my local
comic-book shop.
There are a couple of things that really strike me about
Usagi Yojimbo. First, it is very educational. A person who read nothing
about Japan except UY would know more about 17th-century Japanese
history and culture than 99% of all Americans. This period is apparently
equivalent to our "wild west" period in terms of cultural significance and
popularity, which is itself a neat thing to know. Second, your letters page is
respectful and sincere in its answers to readers. (One smart mouth in the
Groo Crew is enough, right, Mark?) I also like the
strong moral themes where right and wrong are clearly defined and the elements
of duty and honor are examined.
Finally, it seems like 95% of all comics are either superhero stuff or
really gross in one way or another. (Some are superhero stuff and
gross.) And while I certainly respect the right of people to create any kind
of comic they want, I am glad there is still room out there for truly
unique, fun, and interesting comics like Usagi Yojimbo. Thank you
for your work.
Sincerely and Strangely Lucid,
Gary Grossman Olympia, WA
P.S. Who drew Groo in the following publications, you or Sergio:
Usagi Yojimbo Summer Special, pg. 23 ("Stupid-looking barbarian.");
UY Vol. 1, #11, pg. 16 (silhouette); and UY Vol. 1, #20,
pg. 5 (Groo flying a kite)?
[I drew Groo in the first two.
[I showed Sergio the original art to UY #20 shortly after I had
completed it and was surprised when people came up to me shortly after it
came out and pointed out Groo on that page. Incidentally, that's Sergio on
the cover of that issue.]
Dear Stan,
Just caught the first issue of Dark Horse's Space
Usagi. Excellent! The return to black-and-white artwork was most welcome.
It was kind of sad to see Mirage's publishing department go under like that, but
hey, these things happen. I'm just glad that I get to continue reading and
enjoying your work uninterrupted. Dark Horse seemed like the most logical place
to move the long-eared one, at least for now. I remember checking out your copy
of the Swedish edition of Usagi, which wasn't really all-Usagi, but had
some Concrete as well. With that in mind, the move to Dark Horse was
quite obvious for me. But the big question still remains: is Usagi
venturing back to Fantagraphics?
All in all, I'm quite satisfied with the smooth
transition to yet another publisher, and I can't wait to see more Usagi
from Dark Horse. Keep it up!
Todd Shogun Cypress, CA
[Usagi, in a sense, never left Fantagraphics since they're
still publishing the trade paperback collections. UY Book 7 should
be hitting the stands about now (with an introduction by Sergio Aragonés),
and Book 1 will be going into its fifth printing in June.]
Dear Jamie & Stan:
About two years ago, I read the first of the collected
volumes of UY and picked up most of the first series featuring Space
Usagi. (Though not with Rhogen in it: I would've remembered him, both for his
richly roguish ways and his resemblance to Gennosuké the Bounty
Hunter.) I made a note to myself to seek out more issues and volumes of
Usagi - past and future - but I never did. Either I was buried in
backlogs (according to my current slowpoke guide, I have enough comics to keep
me reading until the middle of this year) or I couldn't pick up the series
chronologically (very important to me). In the case of the other Space Usagi
series, I think I just plain forgot about it...until I saw that Dark Horse
was bringing it back. An in the same week as Warlords of Mars, no less! (Usagi and John
Carter...think about it...or Carson Napier...)
Stan Sakai didn't get fancy. Oh, he got futuristic in
"Warrior" - and the "surge" put a wondrous new spin on the old blades -
but his first chapter was best for its concentration of eternal verities: the
young lord who must prove himself; the pirate whose amorality comes with a
morality of its own; the mysterious relative who perhaps can be trusted and
perhaps can't; and, best of all, the samurai who carries on, perhaps
because of the code of bushido and perhaps in spite of it. The results
were quite entertaining and occasionally very poignant (Rhogen's concern for
Usagi, Usagi with the hologram of Tomoeh), and just the thing to make me feel a
little better over not having any more reprints of Lone Wolf and Cub to read.
Make the next two issues as good as this one, and I will
seek out what I meant to seek out in 1994. so, until the koroshi-tama
summon us again, thank you for your
time. To Barsoom! John Carter and Clayton call...
Very truly yours,
Charles J. Sperling
Flushing, NY
[Next issue: The conclusion of "Noodles"!]

An ad for the new
Usagi Yojimbo Roleplaying Game
by Gold Rush Games!
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