USAGI YOJIMBO Volume 3, Number 15


 
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USAGI YOJIMBO Volume 3, Number 15

USAGI YOJIMBO Volume 3, Number 14 <-- --> USAGI YOJIMBO Volume 3, Number 16

Contents
  Synopsis for Grasscutter Chapter 1: Jei
Letters Column
Letters Column
 

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

The Kanji reads
"Kusanagi-No-Tsurugi" -
"The Grasscutting Sword."

by STAN SAKAI
Art by Stan Sakai

[The story notes have been copied to the story - P. Dark]

[I've been complimented on the research I do, but now it's time for you readers to do some of your own because it's CONTEST TIME! The Japanese people call their country "Nihon" or "Nippon." But how did westerners come to call it "Japan"?

[The first to give me a satisfactory explanation will receive an original drawing of Usagi. Submissions must be sent by regular mail. The correct answer with the earliest postmark wins. Be sure to include your name and address on your entry! [Winner announced in UY Vol 3, #17 Letters Column]]

Dear Mr. Sakai and Mr. Rich,

I have not previously written you a letter and thought now would be an appropriate time. I wish to congratulate you on a truly outstanding comic. It has been several years since I have collected comics and buying Usagi Yojimbo has brought me back into a hobby I greatly enjoy. I have been collecting your comics for a few months and thanks to a great local comics shop and a lucky day in Oklahoma, I have been able to pick up most of Usagi's appearances. Your art is rich and joy to look at, but it is your fascinating stories which keep me coming back. It is absolutely wonderful how you are able to convey so much Japanese history and culture in only a few pages. Even glimpses into the lives of Japanese peasants is refreshing and entertaining. I'm a college student majoring in East Asian Languages and Cultures, and it is great to have historically and culturally accurate representations of Japan available to the American public. I particularly enjoy your stories which feature creatures from the Japanese supernatural. In [Vol. 3] #3 you mentioned the book Japanese Ghosts and Demons, edited by Stephen Addiss, as a source for your research. As it happens, I took a class by the same name last semester from two of the contributing authors of the Addiss book! If you ever need more sources on the supernatural of Japan, the University of Kansas has two walking encyclopedias. Hopefully, if all goes well, I will be able to write my honor's thesis using your books as a source. Once again, thank you so much for the great stories and the wonderful representation of the Japanese people and their cultural history.

Jesse R. Hodges
Wichita, KS

[Japan has such a rich heritage of myths and folklore. Unfortunately, except for a few, they are virtually unknown to westerners. Japanese Ghosts and Demons, edited by Stephen Addiss (New York: George Braziller, Inc, in association with Spencer Museum of Art, University of Kansas, 1985), is a wonderful resource. I wish there were more books like this one.]

Fan Art by Jay Stephens
Fan Art by Jay Stephens
Usagi meets Jetcat,
by Jay Stephens. Super-deformed Usagi
envelope art by Andi Watson,
creator of Skeleton Key
(Amaze Ink Comics).

Jay's Land of Nod is on sale now,
from Dark Horse.

Dear Stan Sakai,

I have enjoyed reading your epic comic Usagi Yojimbo over the many years. It has been the one comic that has never disappointed me, while always coming up with twists of other Japanese stories and folk tales. I am very impressed with all of the research that you must put into producing Usagi although reading the comic takes only a fraction of the time. I hope that you never get tired of producing Usagi Yojimbo since for the past seven years of following the story I have always looked forward to the next issue. I did have a question about the possibility of Usagi re-encountering The Lone Goat and Kid. I really enjoyed the story, but I think that it still has potential for being a great adventure for Usagi.

Colin Rothrock
Kalamazoo, MI

[The Lone Goat and Kid will return (I love that little guy). However, I've got quite a few stories lined up before that reunion.]

by STAN SAKAI
 
 
USAGI YOJIMBO Volume 3, Number 14 <-- --> USAGI YOJIMBO Volume 3, Number 16


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Last change: 19. May 2003

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Usagi Yojimbo, including all prominent characters featured in the stories and the distinctive likenesses thereof are trademarks of Stan Sakai and Usagi Studios. Usagi Yojimbo is a registered trademark of Stan Sakai. Names, characters, places, and incidents featured in this publication either are the product of the authors imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons (living or dead), events, institutions, or locales, without satiric content, is coincidental.