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Send comments to: Usagi Yojimbo ~ Letters Column c/o Dark Horse Comics
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[The story notes have been copied
to the story
- P. Dark]
Dear Mr. Stan Sakai,
My final words on "Grasscutter": Lord Kotetsu, Ryoko, and
Kitanamono were intriguing new characters, sinister, mysterious...and you
killed all three of them?!
Please bring back Ryoko! She was powerful and eerie, and her link with
Kitanamono was dramatic.
Some comments on the latest issue of Usagi
Yojimbo. Usagi's facial expression on page 2 (panels 1 and 8) and page 10
(panel 5) of "My Father's Swords" [UY Vol. 3, #23] reminded me
so much of Sergio Aragonés' Catnippon, I had to chuckle. It's the
tiny details that you are so good at including in your depiction of the
characters that make all the difference - a raised eyebrow, the beginnings of a
sneer, a sideways glance.
A very smooth transition from "Grasscutter" to Usagi's
next few solo adventures. A sad and touching story about Chiaki and his father.
Matsuo's slaying of the bandits with his own sword while Chiaki was unconscious,
Usagi's shock at discovering who he was, and their argument over whether to tell
Chiaki the truth were finely handled. Also, in issue #23, we get to see a facet
of Usagi's character that he usually doesn't get to express: his mischievous
sense of humor, with Gen about spending Hosoku's bounty and with the peasant
with whom he won the bet. That satisfied smirk on Usagi's face - priceless!
[Vol. 3] Issue #24, "The Demon Flute," was also well done.
Usagi, determined to help the villagers but quickly getting into a situation
beyond his control - excellent! It makes our favorite ronin
more humanly vulnerable while still doing his heroic best. The look of
fright and panic on his face on pages 16 and 17 was superb! Overall, the whole
atmosphere of suspense and paranoia was well depicted through your effective
balancing of black and white (kind of like the film noir mysteries).
Finally, I have a few questions I'm
curious about:
1) Is former General Ikeda, whom we've all come to know and love in
"Grasscutter," the same "Lord" Ikeda that Sanshobo had served as a
samurai years earlier, as mentioned in "The Bonze's Story"
[UY Vol. 3, #3]? If so, a meeting of these two men years
later, after all the changes their lives have gone through, would be
very interesting.
2) Exactly how old is Lord Noriyuki? He's been described by his enemies
as a "brat" and a "whelp," suggesting that he isn't 15 yet, the legal age of
majority for men in ancient Japanese society. But way back in "Lone Rabbit
and Child," he and Tomoe were traveling to Edo to have Noriyuki officially
confirmed as the leader of the Geishu Clan by the Shogun. Would an
underage daimyo heir be allowed to rule even if he wasn't yet 15?
He's always seemed about 8-10 years old to me. How old do you envision Lord
Geishu as being at this point?
3) Are you, by any chance, a descendent of the Edo period artist
Sakai Hoitsu, who lived from 1761-1829? He was the younger brother
of Sakai Munemasa Tadazane, a daimyo of the Himeji area. I
know that you were born in Kyoto, and Himeji isn't so far away...Of course,
"Sakai" probably isn't such a rare name in Japan, but I was just
wondering. (If you're interested in seeing his work, there are some of his
paintings in the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. His painted scrolls
depicting the twelve months of the year and the flowers/animal popularly
associated with each are really lovely.)
Larry Hilf Rochester, NY
[1) Yes, General Ikeda is the same lord under whom Sanshobo served.
[2) I have taken some liberties in Noriyuki. Samurai boys had
their hair turned into topknots and officially became men at age 15. There are
many cases in which children were declared the lord of a clan, though the true
power was held by regents. Noriyuki is 10-12 years old. I chose to make him a
very precocious child mainly for story purposes. He rules with the help of many
advisors, Tomoe among them.
[3) I am not a descendent of Hoitsu. Though our family names sound similar
and are spelled the same in English, we actually use different
kanji characters when writing them in Japanese.
[Congratulations to Garth Pricer, who was the first person to correctly
guess the killer's identity in "The Hairpin Murders"! As a result, Garth is
now the proud owner of a brand new Usagi Yojimbo
T-shirt!]
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