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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: dianas dhorse.com
Web: http://www.darkhorse.com
UsagiYojimbo Dojo: http://www.usagiyojimbo.com
[I will be a guest at the Fanimé Con at the Westin Hotel
in Santa Clara, CA on February 25-27. If you're interested in animé or
manga, come down. Other than that, I usually
drop in to Gary's Corner Bookstore in San Gabriel, CA on Fridays for my
weekly funnybook fix.] |
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[The story notes have been copied
to the story
- P. Dark] -->
Dear Mr. Sakai,
I just made it through my stack of summer reading to [Vol.
3] issue #30, and it reminded me that I've meant to write you since
seeing you in August.
First, congratulations again on your Eisner award. I'm glad at least one
of the people I voted for won! My batting average was particularly bad this
year, I'm sad to say - sad for most of the nominees I favored, anyway.
Second, thanks for the excellent series of Inspector Ishida mysteries. I
hope you've enjoyed doing them as much as we (Kat and I, and lots of other
people, judging by the letters columns) have enjoyed reading them. I hope
that [Vol. 3] issue #30 isn't the last we'll see of him.
Third, since my appreciation of your work continues to increase at a pace
only matched by the growth of my bald spot (I was born in 1963 Year of the
Rabbit, and it's starting to show in my hairline!). I hope to someday sport
one of those super-cool Usagi Yojimbo caps you sold out of in San
Diego. If you can, please keep them in production long enough for me to
purchase one the next time we meet. (Mid-Ohio, perhaps?)
Finally, and speaking of San Diego, thanks again for the kind words about
my books and the research that goes into them - they really gave me a boost.
High praise indeed from someone who has been one of the trailblazers when it
comes to historically accurate comics.
Jim Ottaviani Ann Arbor, MI
[Jim is the writer of several wonderful science-based books done in
collaboration with various artists and published by G.T. Labs:
Dignifying Science, Wild Person of the Woods, and (my
favorite) the Eisner-nominated and Xeric-winning Two-Fisted
Science.]
Dear Usagi Yojimbo:
This story would have been perfect for Halloween and reminded me of a
manga plot version of a Scooby-Doo cartoon because, at the end, the
obakémono were all fakes. Scooby-Doo and friends would investigate
a haunting, and, at the end, the ghosts or monsters were just bad guys in
masks. "The Inn on Moon Shadow Hill" was nevertheless frightening, and as
Usagi Yojimbo went deeper into the woods, it brought back memories of
The Blair Witch Project movie. When the inn was brought into the
story, I knew something was sinister with this nice establishment. Things
only got creepier as foxes, flying heads, ogres, water demons, and more were
mentioned. The haunting of these woods seemed like a great
psychic-phenomenal disturbance. As he was told that a priest blessed this
inn, the real hidden agenda was being kept in the shadows from Usagi.
Usagi Yojimbo [Vol. 3] #31 was an exceptional story
that showed the testing of wills. The spirit of the "samurai will"
was tested. The taunt, laughter, and teases - that a samurai is
supposed to be fearless - were cruel for Usagi. I was disappointed that
Usagi accepted the challenge to retrieve the white stone. His mental prowess
to become a samurai should have held him back from that bet. He
need not prove anything; to know that he is a true samurai should
have been good enough. Encounters with the monsters were exceptionally
exciting, and I was somewhat saddened to learn later that they were
fraudulent. I was hoping that there was some truth to the story of the
haunting in the woods, because this story could have continued on. No matter
that the ending came out differently from the way I wanted it to, I still
enjoyed the story immensely. Thank you for the entertainment!
Paul Dale Roberts pdroberts jazmaonline.com
[Usagi has already ventured a couple of times into a haunted forest:
"The Tangled Skein" ["The Tangled Skein", Critters #38 and UY Book 7;
"The Wrath of the Tangled Skein", UY Vol. 3, #3 and UY Book
10].]
Dear Stan,
When I saw the cover of this issue, the first thing that went through my
head was, "Another ghost story within a year? Stan must be slipping."
However, I have never had more fun being proved wrong.
The atmosphere of the story is exquisite, a bit like a comics version of
The Blair Witch Project. I especially liked seeing Usagi betray
terror he has not felt since he was a kitten having a nightmare of
facing his master as a gaki, culminating in that stunning
double-page spread of all those monsters. I was certain at that moment that
those monsters were real on account of the appearance of the tengu,
the kitsuné, the kappa , and the giant terror by revealing
it all was what I call a "Scooby-Doo" jolted me into the realization that
you were playing on my previous assumption, and I enjoyed the payoff.
Finally, it was a wonderfully silly moment to see Usagi play up the hoax
with such a hilariously bug-eyed hysterical act. You've made your series
such a believable, dramatic one that it is so easy to forget your equal
talent in humor.
By the way, I have seen these kinds of ghosts before in the film Pon
Poko , when the raccoons were trying to scare the construction crews
away. So I was wondering: do you think Usagi could have an encounter with
those changeling raccoons one day?
Kenneth Chisholm kchishol execulink.com
[The tanuki is actually a dog (canis
viverrinus). It has a furry body, a long fuzzy tail, and dark areas
around the eyes that make it resemble a raccoon. It, like the
kitsuné (fox), is a shape-changing trickster. In one story, a
priest at Morinji Temple was about to hang a teakettle over the
fire when it suddenly sprouted a head, tail, and feet. The furry teakettle
scampered around the room as more priests rushed in and captured it. The
tanuki decided to stay in the temple, sometimes transforming itself
into a priest.
[Not all tanuki stories end so pleasantly. In another story, a
tanuki kills a farmer's wife and tricks her husband into eating
her. A friendly rabbit eventually avenges the farmers.]
[Late-breaking news: Stan has just been named the recipient of
this year's Haxtur Award, all the way from Spain, for Best Short Story, for
"Noodles," in Usagi Yojimbo Book 10. Congratulations, Stan! -
Diana]
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