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Send comments to: Usagi Yojimbo ~ Letters Column c/o Dark Horse Comics
10956 S.E. Main Street, Milwaukie, OR 97222
[E-MAIL] jamier@dhorse.com [www] http://www.dhorse.com
UsagiYojimbo Dojo: http://heart.engr.csulb.edu/~tbustill/usagi.html
["Return to Adachi Plain" originally appeared in
the Usagi Yojimbo, Book 4, hardcover edition ("The Dragon Bellow
Conspiracy"), as a fully painted story done in watercolors. That 1990 edition,
limited to 1500 signed-and-numbered copies with an original drawing in each, was
an immediate sellout. There are no plans to reprint those color pages at this
time; however, I did have the pencilled pages upon which the paintings were
based. I had always intended to finish those pages, so I redrew a few panels and
switched others around and, as a real treat for myself as well as the readers, I
asked good friend Sergio Aragonés of Groo and Mad Magazine
fame to ink over my pencils.
[It was Sergio's idea for me to ink the framing panels, thereby giving
the flashback an even more distinctive look.
[I think the story turned out great. If you want to know Sergio's
feelings about inking my less-than-detailed pencils, take a look at his drawing
on this page.]
Fan Art by Sergio Aragonés

Dear Jamie S. and Stan
In a box in my room, along with six volumes of Winsor McCay's Little Nemo,
there are the last six volumes of Fantagraphics' Usagi Yojimbo library.
I won't get to them for a while, but I keep looking at them, and each time I
find something new to linger over: the rabbit ronin's early years; the
history of Gen (who is a true samurai, however hard he tries to be an
unemotional mercenary); the passage of the valiant tokagé Spot from
Usagi to Zato-Ino; and the way Usagi interacts with children, from Jotaro to
Genta, the would-be samurai of "The Silk Fair." There's a lot to look
forward to, but there's certainly nothing to be disappointed in with the UY
I have now.
Take "The Withered Field" in #7, for
example.
Visually, I have to praise Stan Sakai for his flashback technique. As
Nakamura Koji related his past, Stan dipped into what worked so well with "Gen's
Story": the inking wasn't as tight, giving us a strong sense of a different
time, one when "an obscure upstart" humiliated the proud Koji. This brought into
sharper relief the "warrior pilgrimage" of the present, when Koji displayed such
masterful reishiki and when he took out sixteen students of the Surudoi School.
You'll note that I didn't write "when Koji and Usagi took out sixteen
students of the Surudoi School," though Usagi, that despiser of treachery, was
with him. That was because I had the hunch that Koji could have beaten the
sixteen students on his own: it might have taken a little longer that it did
with Usagi's help, but it would have happened nonetheless. Koji was that good,
and yet, the goodness was tainted. All of this superb swordsmanship was for a
purpose: for a rematch with Katsuichi-Sensei, the mountain hermit who taught Usagi.
In my skimming of the six volumes, I've met Katsuichi and seen his majesty -
with one eye, he still sees more than those with two, and Usagi's duel with him
in Vol. 6
ended in Katsuichi's victory. A rematch with Koji would be quite dramatic, yet
also rather a waste. The best swords remain in their scabbards, according to
Katsuichi (as Usagi has learned to appreciate), and it should be enough that
Koji took his defeat to heart and began the warrior pilgrimage. He should thank
Katsuichi, not slay him.
Honor is a funny thing. We saw that
well in "The Withered Field" with Koji, but also with Ishii and Ueno. Ishii lost
his honor when he sent the students after Koji and committed ritual suicide.
Ueno, when he learned what had happened, went out to find Koji and fought him,
dying in the process. Sir John Falstaff would make light of this, and not
without reason: eighteen dead in one issue because of "an obscure upstart" was a
bit much. Yet, when Stan delves into ancient Japan, it always seems
comprehensible. Sad, maybe, and tragic, possibly, but we understand these people
and their ways by the time we're done with them.
I would like to see Katsuichi meet Koji again. Perhaps their differences need
not be settled with blood, and Koji can become Katsuichi's pupil. In any case,
long may the warrior pilgrimage continue for Usagi, and long may Stan continue
to give us the excellent adventures of a masterless samurai with a great sword and a
greater heart.
Charles J. Sperling Flushing, NY
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